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Compliance Quarterly Türkiye
In this issue of our Compliance Quarterly Türkiye, we continue to inform our clients about the global and local compliance rules and regulations which impact Turkish businesses.
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Canada | Publication | November 2025
As of November 12, 2025, British Columbia employers are prohibited from requesting sick notes for certain health-related employee absences. This legal update summarizes that prohibition.
The legislative framework around employee sick leave and sick notes has been evolving rapidly in the past two years. As we outlined in our most recent “Canadian employment and labour quarterly” newsletter:
In May 2025, B.C. passed Bill 11, Employment Standards Amendment Act, 2025, which laid the groundwork for a sick note prohibition applicable to all employers and employees covered by B.C.’s Employment Standards Act (the ESA). However, Bill 11 left out many key details, including the effective date of the prohibition and its scope, including potential exemptions.
On November 12, 2025, the B.C. government declared the Bill 11 sick note prohibition in force and published regulatory amendments to flesh out necessary details.
The B.C. sick note prohibition is set out in a new ESA section 49.2, along with revisions to the Employment Standards Regulation. Taken together, the following rules now apply to provincially regulated employers and employees in British Columbia:
Adapting to a prohibition on sick notes does not mean accepting all employee absences without question. An employer might:
Our Vancouver employment and labour team would be pleased to answer any questions you have about this new development.
The definition of “Immediate family” remains unchanged and is still defined in the ESA as (a) the spouse, child, parent, guardian, sibling, grandchild or grandparent of an employee, (b) the child or parent of an employee's spouse, and (c) any person who lives with an employee as a member of the employee's family.
Publication
In this issue of our Compliance Quarterly Türkiye, we continue to inform our clients about the global and local compliance rules and regulations which impact Turkish businesses.
Publication
On 13 November 2025, the European Parliament adopted (subject to certain amendments) the substantive Omnibus Directive which was proposed by the European Commission on 26 February 2025 (see our previous briefing here). The Omnibus proposal has now been referred to the Committee of Legal Affairs to proceed to the trilogue negotiations.
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