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Mask manufacturer and engineering firm ordered to pay employee $50k

A company that manufactured COVID masks in Port Coquitlam during the pandemic is on the hook for a portion of $51,941 in employee wages, following a recent decision from the Employment Standards Tribunal.

Christine Kanno worked for Vitacore Industries from September 2021 to June 26, 2022. She started working for consulting company Absolute Building Science Strata Engineering Inc. on June 27, 2022.

After losing her job in August 2022, Kanno filed a complaint, alleging the companies owed her wages, overtime, and vacation pay. The tribunal agreed, and in December 2023 the two companies were ordered to pay Kanno $51,941, as well as $2,000 in administrative penalties.

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Vitacore and Strata Engineering recently appealed that decision, noting that tribunal member Shannon Corregan had treated the two companies as one employer.

The companies, “have different boards of directors . . . [and] are engaged in very different businesses,” they contended.

Strata Engineering is an engineering consulting business while Vitacore is a medical equipment manufacturing business.

Each company filed essentially identical appeals, according to tribunal member David B. Stevenson.

Kannno testified that Strata Engineering “saw a business opportunity” and established Vitacore during the pandemic. Besides sharing staff and resources and regularly charging back wages and expenses from one company to the other, Vitacore’s revenue was covering Strata Engineering’s operations, according to Kanno.

While Kanno was hired by Vitacore, her office was in Strata Engineering’s headquarters in Burnaby. She served as the sole human resources provider for both companies.

Kanno’s argument was corroborated by Vitacore representative Mikhail Moore.

Vitacore was sort of like Strata Engineering’s “child,” Moore told the tribunal.

Any work Kanno did for Strata Engineering would have been related to Vitacore, according to Moore.

Kanno was also involved in transferring employees from Strata Engineering to Vitacore.

The two companies were in a “symbiotic relationship,” Stevenson concluded.

The Employment Standards Tribunal doesn’t accept appeals that challenge findings of fact or ask the tribunal to re-weigh the evidence.

“The arguments made here attempt to do both,” Stevenson noted. “I find there is no apparent merit to these appeals and no reasonable prospect they will succeed.”

The appeals were dismissed and the companies ordered to pay $53,941.

Author

A chiropractor and a folk singer, after having one great kid, decided to push their luck and have one more, a boy they named Jeremy Shepherd.

Shepherd grew up around Blue Mountain Park in Coquitlam, following a basketball around and trying his best to get to the NBA (it didn’t work out, at least not yet).

With no career plans after graduating Porter Elementary school, Jeremy Shepherd pursued higher education at Como Lake Middle School and eventually, Centennial High School.

Approximately 1,000 movies and several beers later in life, Shepherd made a change.

Having done nothing worth writing, he decided to see if he could write something worth reading.

Since graduating journalism school at Langara College, Shepherd has been a reporter, editor and, reluctantly, a content provider for community newspapers around Metro Vancouver for more than 10 years.

He worked with dogged reporters, eloquently indignant curmudgeons and creative photographers, all of whom shared a little of what they knew.

Now, as he goes about the business of raising two fascinating humans alongside a wonderful partner, Shepherd is delighted to report news and tell stories in the Tri-Cities.

He runs, reads, and is intrigued by art, science, smart cities and new ideas. He is pleased to meet you.