Media Clipping — April 29, 2004, The Charlottetown Guardian
Most working overtime do so without pay: study
Nearly two-thirds of Nova Scotians who work overtime aren't getting paid for it, according to a new report released Monday by Halifax thinktank GPI Atlantic.
In a typical week in 2001, salaried employees worked about 373,000 overtime hours for no extra pay, says the report.
"It's a staggering number and these people are doing it for free," said Linda Pannozzo, the report's main author.
Only 38 per cent of Nova Scotians who work overtime get paid for it, says the report. About 59 per cent of workers who work overtime – many of them teachers and managers – aren't compensated for the extra effort.
Overtime is a moving target in this province and nation-wide. It increased 15 per cent between 1997 and 2001, says the 500-page report.
"If all overtime hours were converted to new full-time jobs, admittedly not an easy task, there would be half a million fewer unemployed Canadians and 16,000 fewer unemployed Nova Scotians," said the report. "If every one of these jobs were filled from the ranks of the officially unemployed, it would reduce unemployment in Nova Scotia by 35 per cent."