December 9th, 2025
The Government of British Columbia passed Bill 30, officially titled the Employment Standards (Serious Illness or Injury Leave) Amendment Act, 2025. While the amendment may appear targeted and medical in nature, it carries meaningful operational, scheduling, and cost implications for restaurant operators across the province.
With restaurants already facing rising labour costs, persistent staffing shortages, and margin compression, Bill 30 introduces a new layer of workforce complexity that operators must now plan for in 2026 and beyond.
Bill 30 introduces up to 27 weeks of unpaid, job-protected medical leave for serious personal illness or injury within any 52-week period.
Restaurants must hold the employee’s position or offer a comparable role upon return, creating long-term scheduling and staffing risk.
The leave can be taken in multiple non-consecutive blocks, making labour forecasting and shift planning more unpredictable.
Even though the leave is unpaid, indirect costs add up fast through temporary hiring, overtime, training, and productivity loss.
Automation, cross-training, and stronger labour forecasting are now essential, especially as BC restaurants already face margin pressure and staffing shortages.
Bill 30 amends the BC Employment Standards Act by adding a new protected, unpaid leave category for employees experiencing serious personal illness or injury.
Key Provisions
Eligible employees may now take:
The leave:
Critically, while the leave is unpaid, the employee’s job is protected, meaning: Restaurants must hold the position or provide a comparable role upon return.
Restaurants are uniquely vulnerable to extended job-protected absences because:
Unlike corporate environments where workload can be redistributed, restaurants rely on:
Each position directly affects service speed, food quality, and guest experience.
A 27-week protected absence (over 6 months) creates long-term scheduling instability, not just short-term sick coverage.
Bill 30 does not exist in a vacuum. BC restaurants are already navigating:
Industry benchmarks already place average restaurant labour costs at:
Even small scheduling inefficiencies caused by extended protected absences now carry outsized financial consequences.
With Bill 30 now in effect, BC restaurant operators should prepare for longer, protected employee absences by focusing on four operational priorities:
1. Strengthen HR & Leave Compliance
Restaurants should now be updating:
Policy gaps now materially increase exposure to:
2. Build Redundancy Into Critical Roles
Operators should reassess:
Cross-training and skill overlap across shifts will become essential to maintain service continuity during extended absences.
3. Shift More Volume to Automation
With long-term job-protected leave now a reality, restaurants must reduce reliance on labour per transaction through:
Automation is no longer just a growth tool, it is now a core risk-management strategy.
4. Rebuild Labour Forecast Models
Operators should now:
Extended protected absences now introduce structural volatility into weekly labour planning.
Bill 30 marks a meaningful shift in how BC restaurants must manage workforce risk, scheduling, and long-term labour planning. While the new 27-week job-protected leave is designed to support employees during serious illness or injury, it also introduces new operational complexity for already margin-constrained operators. Restaurants that update policies early, strengthen cross-training, and invest in automation will be best positioned to absorb these changes without sacrificing service quality or profitability.
The leave is unpaid, but it is fully job-protected, meaning restaurants must reinstate the employee or provide a comparable position when they return.
Yes. The leave can be taken in non-consecutive full-week units, as long as the total does not exceed 27 weeks within 52 weeks and proper medical certification is provided.
Small teams face greater risk, as a single long-term protected absence can lead to:
This makes cross-training and automation especially critical for smaller operations.