True business security means never having to wonder if your employee handbook is legally sound. Upgrade your foundational HR documents and protect your bottom line from future liabilities.

Manitoba Small Business: HR Compliance Gap Checklist
Most business owners believe they are covered because they “treat people well.” In the eyes of Manitoba Employment Standards and Workplace Safety and Health (WSH), however, if a policy isn’t documented, communicated, and reviewed, it effectively doesn’t exist.
Ask yourself these 5 questions to see where your business stands:
1. The “Termination” Test: If you had to terminate an employee today for poor performance, do you have a signed Progressive Discipline Policy and a Termination of Employment Policy that specifically references the Manitoba Employment Standards Code?
The Risk: Without these, an employee can claim “wrongful dismissal” at the Labour Board, potentially forcing a settlement or a mandatory rehire.
2. The “Work Refusal” Test: Under The Workplace Safety and Health Act (Manitoba), every employee has the right to refuse unsafe work. Do you have a written Work Refusal Policy that outlines the exact 3-step process required by provincial law?
The Risk: Mishandling a work refusal can lead to immediate provincial investigations and heavy fines for the employer.
3. The “Respectful Workplace” Test: Manitoba law requires employers to protect staff from harassment and abuse. Do you have a Respectful Workplace Policy that includes a clear “Roles and Responsibilities” section for Supervisors?
The Risk: If an incident occurs and you don’t have a documented policy and training plan, the business (and you personally) could be held liable for “failing to provide a safe psychological environment.”
4. The “Medical Leave” Test: Do you have a clear Sick Time and Medical Leave Policy that aligns with the Employment Standards Code (Manitoba) and a Return to Work (RTW) Policy for injured workers?
The Risk: Improperly managing medical leave can lead to Human Rights complaints based on “failure to accommodate,” which are notoriously expensive and time-consuming to fight.
5. The “IT & Privacy” Test: Does your IT Acceptable Use Policy explicitly state that company devices and emails are for business use and subject to review?
The Risk: Without this, an employee may have a “reasonable expectation of privacy,” making it legally difficult for you to access evidence of misconduct on a company computer.
The Verdict
If you answered “No” or “I’m not sure” to even one of these questions, your business is operating with a significant legal blind spot. Take a minute to look over this checklist. If any of these exposures worry you, it is time to secure your operations.
KevinOne’s HR Suite closes these gaps with professional, Manitoba-compliant documents designed to protect your time, your money, and your reputation.
The Complete HR Document Suite
When you partner with KevinOne, you receive a comprehensive, ready-to-deploy library of HR documents, policies, and forms. Everything is structured to meet provincial standards and provide immediate operational clarity.
Policies
Policy 001: Confidentiality and Privacy Policy
Policy 002: Respectful Workplace Policy (Harassment & Abuse)
Policy 003: Work Refusal Policy
Policy 004: Progressive Discipline Policy
Policy 005-01: Return to Work (RTW) Policy (Under 25 Employees)
Policy 005-02: Return to Work (RTW) Policy (25+ Employees)
Policy 006: Sick Time and Medical Leave
Policy 007: Management Rights
Policy 008: Workplace Injury Procedure
Policy 009: Information Technology (IT) Acceptable Use Policy
Policy 010: Hours of Work and Overtime
Policy 011: Termination of Employment
Policy 012-01: Health and Safety Policy (20+ Employees)
Policy 012-02: Health and Safety Policy (10 to 19 Employees)
Policy 012-03: Health and Safety Policy (Less than 10 Employees)
Policy 013: Code of Conduct
Policy 014: Vacation Policy
Policy 015: WHMIS Policy
Agreements & Procedures
Agreement: IT Acceptable Use Agreement
Procedure: When to update your policies before the 3-year mandatory review
Operational Forms & Checklists
Employee Corrective Action and Discipline Form
Employee Termination and Offboarding Checklist
Incident Report Form
New Employee Onboarding Checklist
Return to Work Plan Form
Safety Committee Minutes Form
Training Record Form
Worker Safety and Health Representative Designation Form (10-19 employees)
Official Letters & Memos
Acceptance of Resignation Letter
Offer Letter: Casual
Offer Letter: Part-Time
Offer Letter: Full-Time
Offer Letter: Temporary
Outcome of Accommodation Review Letter
Termination of Employment (Without Cause) Letter
Workplace Safety and Health (WSH) Committee Memo
