Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Company To Pay Job Applicant $8,000 For Saying It Only Hires White Man

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 08 Sep, 2014 05:32 PM
    TORONTO -- Ontario's Human Rights Tribunal has ruled an Ottawa-area company discriminated against a foreign-born job applicant by telling him it "only hires white men."
     
    The tribunal has ordered Ottawa Valley Cleaning and Restoration to pay $8,000 to Malek Bouraoui, who was denied a job last year.
     
    Bouraoui says after applying for a job, he received a call from a man named Jesse, who asked what country he was from and whether he was white or black.
     
    Bouraoui later received text messages from Jesse, who said he didn't hire foreigners and keeps "the white man working."
    The tribunal ruled that the contents of the text messages were not only discriminatory but "egregious and abusive in nature."
     
    It said the company -- which did not file a response or participate in the matter -- persistently ridiculed Bouraoui because of his race, colour and place of origin, and denied him employment based on prohibited grounds.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013

    Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013
    The number of cougars destroyed by conservation officers in B.C. in the 2013-2014 fiscal year jumped dramatically compared with a year earlier.

    Confrontations between humans and cougars means more big cats destroyed in 2013

    Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million

    Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million
    Pulp and bank note producer Fortress Paper Ltd. is selling its operations that make security film used in bank notes to Nanotech Security Corp. for up to $17.5 million in cash and shares.

    Fortress Paper sells maker of security threads in bank notes for $17.5 million

    Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms

    Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms
    Secondary schools in Vancouver are expected to be behind picket lines this week as part of a province-wide attempt to pressure the British Columbia government.

    Striking B.C. teachers step up pressure tactics as school year looms

    Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse

    Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse
    Police in western Manitoba have charged a couple with confining, starving and sexually abusing their children.

    Kids removed from Manitoba home: parents charged with confinement, sex abuse

    Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence

    Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence
    The Quebec government has called a public inquiry into the fire that killed 32 people at a seniors' residence last January.

    Quebec calls inquiry into fire that killed 32 people at seniors' residence

    Saskatoons or Juneberries? Name debate brewing between Canada and U.S.

    Saskatoons or Juneberries? Name debate brewing between Canada and U.S.
    A food fight of sorts could be growing between Canada and the United States over a tiny berry.

    Saskatoons or Juneberries? Name debate brewing between Canada and U.S.