(604)732-7678
2526 W 5th Ave, Vancouver, BC V6K 1T1

LTD benefits after termination

Fired While on Disability in BC

fired while on LTD in BC

Fired While on Disability in BC: The LTD, EI, and Human Rights Overlap Nobody Explains Clearly

You can be sick, receiving disability benefits, and still face termination pressure in British Columbia. This guide explains how LTD insurance, EI, and human rights accommodation overlap, where risk points usually appear, and what to document before you make a move.

Free consultation. Phone first.

Call 604-732-7678

If writing is easier: Use the contact form (https://timlouislaw.com/contact-us/)

General information only, not legal advice. Every situation is fact-specific.

The simple truth most people learn too late

Being on disability does not automatically protect your job, and termination does not automatically end your LTD benefits. What matters is why the employer acted, what steps were taken around accommodation, and what the paper trail shows.

Here is the simple truth that gets missed in the panic: your job status and your benefit status are not the same system. Your employer controls your employment relationship. Your insurer controls your LTD claim under the policy. Those two tracks can move in different directions at the same time, and people get hurt when they assume one automatically decides the other.

When termination pressure shows up, employers often try to frame the story in safer language like “performance,” “restructuring,” or “operational needs.” Sometimes that framing is legitimate. Sometimes it is a cover for a disability-related problem the employer did not manage properly. Either way, the outcome usually turns on what was said, what was offered, what was refused, and what was documented.

The real risk for you is not just the decision itself. It is losing access to evidence and timelines while everything is moving fast. Emails disappear, accounts get shut off, meetings happen by phone, and suddenly you are trying to reconstruct the story from memory. Memory is not proof. A clean paper trail is.

If HR is moving quickly and you feel behind, a short call can help you slow the situation down and protect your options: 604-732-7678.

The three systems at play (and why people get trapped)

This overlap usually involves three moving parts: your employer’s decisions, your LTD insurer’s claim process, and disability-related accommodation duties under human rights law. Confusion happens when one system changes and the others keep moving.

Think of this like three gears turning at once. One gear is your workplace. One gear is the insurer. One gear is the law around disability and accommodation. When people get trapped, it is usually because they respond to only one gear and miss what the other two are doing.

LTD (insurance): LTD is income replacement tied to the policy’s definition of disability. In many situations, benefits can continue even if employment ends, but the insurer will still look closely at medical support, restrictions, and ongoing eligibility. (Related: Long-Term Disability Lawyer Vancouver, BC (Main Hub), Denied Long-Term Disability in BC (Guide))

EI sickness (federal benefit): EI sickness is a separate federal program that people often use while waiting for decisions or during gaps. It does not “prove” disability for LTD, and it does not decide whether a termination was lawful, but it can matter for timing and cash flow.

Human rights and accommodation: This is where the “why” becomes critical. If termination is connected to disability and accommodation was not handled properly, the legal issues can shift quickly. That is why careful, factual documentation and calm written communication matter so much in the early stage (Related: Employment Lawyer Vancouver (Hub), Duty to accommodate in Vancouver workplaces)

The path most people are living when disability, LTD and termination collide

Most cases follow a predictable path: health issue, time off, accommodation friction, then benefits paperwork and job pressure. Knowing the usual risk points helps you document early, before access disappears.

When people feel blindsided, it is rarely because the situation came out of nowhere. It is because the steps happened quickly, across different systems, and the “story” got written for them while they were focused on getting through the day. This flowchart is the pattern we see most often in BC when health issues, LTD paperwork, and job security collide.

  1. Symptoms or diagnosis begin affecting work
    You notice tasks taking longer, mistakes increasing, attendance slipping, or your health worsening after work.
  2. Time off starts (sick leave, modified duties, reduced hours)
    You take leave, cut hours, or try to keep working with adjustments to stay afloat.
  3. Accommodation discussions begin (or get delayed)
    HR or management asks for medical notes, duties change, or meetings happen without clear follow-through.
  4. LTD application starts (forms, medical support, job duties, restrictions)
    You enter the paperwork phase: insurer forms, doctor reports, job description details, and restrictions documentation.
  5. Employer frustration phase
    This is where pressure often rises: performance framing, restructuring talk, “not a good fit,” or hints that your role is becoming a problem.
  6. Termination pressure or termination event
    You are pushed to resign, offered a package, threatened with termination, or terminated outright.
  7. After termination: benefits continuation, EI questions, and human rights concerns surface
    People scramble to figure out what happens to LTD, whether EI applies, and whether accommodation was handled properly.

If you are between steps 4–6, protect your paper trail now.

That is the window where evidence is easiest to save and hardest to recreate later. (Helpful next reads: Denied LTD in BC, Your “Any Occupation” Survival Plan (BC), Surveillance and Social Media in LTD Claims)

Fired While on Disability in BC: LTD, EI, and Human Rights overlap

The four “termination pressure” patterns we see most often

Termination pressure often shows up as a story shift: from health to performance, from accommodation to “operational needs,” or from temporary leave to “abandonment.” Spotting the pattern early helps you respond calmly and in writing.

When someone is dealing with illness or disability, pressure rarely arrives as a single dramatic moment. More often, it arrives as a series of small moves that narrow your options and speed up your decision-making. Here are four patterns we see again and again in BC.

  1. 1) A performance narrative appears without a clean paper trail
    This pattern often starts with vague language: “concerns,” “fit,” “reliability,” “communication,” “productivity.” The issue is not that employers can never raise performance. It is that the narrative appears suddenly, often after health-related absences or accommodation discussions, and without the usual groundwork you would expect to see in writing.

    A safer response is to slow it down and bring it back to facts. Ask for specifics in writing. What incidents? What dates? What expectations changed? If your health has been affecting function, the goal is not to argue. The goal is to keep the record accurate and grounded. (Related: Employment Lawyer Vancouver (Hub), Dismissal Without Cause, Wrongful Dismissal Vancouver BC)
  2. 2) “Resign and we will give you a reference”
    This is a pressure move because it frames resignation as the “clean” option and implies that protecting your reputation requires giving up your rights. It can also create urgency, especially if you are already worried about your ability to work or about gaps in employment.

    If you are hearing this, treat it as a red flag. You can ask for the offer in writing and request time to review it. You do not need to make a same-day decision, and you should be cautious about verbal promises that are not documented.
  3. 3) “Your role is eliminated” soon after accommodation conflict
    Sometimes roles are legitimately reorganized. The pattern we watch for is timing. If the job is “eliminated” shortly after you request accommodation, provide medical restrictions, take leave, or raise concerns about how you are being treated, it can raise questions that deserve a closer look.

    In these situations, details matter: what changed in the business, what alternatives were considered, what positions remain, and whether the employer explored accommodation options in a meaningful way. You do not need to accuse anyone. You do need a clear timeline and a clear record. (Related: Duty to Accommodate in Vancouver)
  4. 4) Access gets cut and you lose proof
    This is one of the biggest risk points in real life. Email access disappears. Teams or Slack messages vanish. Scheduling systems lock you out. Shared files are gone. When that happens, people lose the ability to show what was said, what was requested, what was promised, and when.

    If you suspect access could be cut, preserve your own records early. Focus on documents you are entitled to keep and that relate to your employment and your own communications. Keeping a dated timeline and saving key written messages can prevent a “he said, she said” situation later.

What to document for HR and what to document for your doctor

Good documentation connects three things: what your job required, what your restrictions are, and what changed in the workplace. The goal is clarity, not emotion.

When people are under stress, documentation often becomes either too thin (“I told them I was sick”) or too emotional (“they are ruining my life”). The strongest files are calm, specific, and consistent. They show the functional reality of the situation without trying to argue the legal conclusion.

For HR (workplace documentation)

Aim to create a clean record of what you requested, what the employer said, and what happened next. Helpful items include your accommodation requests, any proposed options, and a brief written summary after meetings that confirms dates and key points. Track changes to duties, schedule, location, reporting structure, and expectations. If you are given new requirements or warnings, ask for them in writing so the record is not based only on phone calls.

A simple habit that helps: after any important conversation, send a short email that confirms the facts in neutral language. You are not escalating. You are preventing confusion.

For your doctor (medical documentation)

For medical notes and forms, focus on function. Your doctor does not need to write legal conclusions. What helps most is a clear description of restrictions and limitations, how long they are expected to last (if known), and what work activities you cannot do or should not do. Where possible, it helps to connect restrictions to job realities, like sustained concentration, long standing, lifting, driving, shift work, high-stress environments, or consistent attendance.

If your condition fluctuates, that can be documented too. The point is to make the file coherent: what your baseline is, what triggers worsening symptoms, and what limits are reliable.

If you are seeing any of these pressure patterns, or you are unsure what to put in writing next, a short call can help you protect your timeline and avoid an unforced mistake.

Free consultation. Phone first. Call 604-732-7678.

If writing is easier: https://timlouislaw.com/contact-us/

The evidence checklist (before you lose access)

Evidence often decides the outcome. Before signing anything or making a major move, save documents that show what your job was, what changed, when it changed, and how you responded.

When access gets cut, it usually happens fast and without warning. That is why the best time to collect key documents is before you think you “need” them. Your goal is simple: preserve the “before and after” record, plus a clean timeline that shows you acted reasonably.

Checklist (tight):

  • Offer letter, employment contract, policy acknowledgements
  • Job description, org chart snapshots, and any role-change messages
  • Pay stubs, commission/bonus plan documents (if applicable), and benefit summaries
  • Medical notes you submitted and the dates you submitted them
  • Accommodation emails, meeting invites/notes, and any proposed options
  • LTD forms, insurer letters/emails, and deadlines you were given
  • A dated timeline of key events (who said what, when, and how you responded)
  • Any termination letter, severance offer, or release (do not sign quickly)

Want help pressure-testing your evidence and timeline?

Call 604-732-7678 (Free consultation. Phone first.)

What to do in the first 48 hours (a safer next step)

In the first 48 hours, focus on preserving evidence and keeping your response calm and written. Avoid impulsive resignations and avoid signing anything under pressure.

The first two days are about control. You may not be able to control what your employer decides, but you can control your record, your tone, and your next step. Calm, written communication protects you from misquotes and helps prevent the story being written without you.

Steps (short list):

  • Save key documents and screenshots while you still have access
  • Start a dated timeline (keep it factual and specific)
  • Respond in writing using facts and clarification questions, not emotion
  • Do not sign releases or “final” documents quickly, even if you feel rushed
  • Book a short legal consult if the situation is serious or moving quickly

If your employment pressure is happening while your LTD file is being assessed, you may also want to review how insurers test credibility and context. (Related: LTD Surveillance in BC, Any Occupation Survival Plan)

Quick questions people ask

Q1: Can I be fired while I am on disability leave in BC?

Yes, but an employer cannot end employment for a discriminatory reason or to avoid accommodation duties. The key question is why the employer acted and what the record shows about accommodation and decision-making.

Q2: If I am terminated, do my LTD benefits stop automatically?

Not always. LTD eligibility is usually decided under the insurance policy definition of disability, which can continue even if employment ends.

Q3: Should I resign if my employer suggests it?

Usually, resigning quickly can reduce your options and make the facts harder to prove later. A safer approach is to document what was said, respond calmly in writing, and get advice before you resign.

Q4: Can I get EI sickness benefits while I am waiting on LTD?

Sometimes, depending on your situation and eligibility, EI sickness benefits can apply as a short-term bridge. The safest move is to confirm the timing and requirements before assuming it will fill the gap. (Official: EI Sickness Benefits)

Q6: What if my employer says my role is “eliminated” during my leave?

A role change can be lawful, but timing and documentation matter, especially if it follows accommodation conflict or disability leave. Save anything that explains the reason, the timeline, and whether other employees were affected.

Q7: What if I lose access to my work email or files?

That is a common risk point because it can erase your ability to prove what happened and when. If you still have access now, preserve key documents and start a dated timeline immediately.

Q8: When should I speak to a lawyer?

If you feel cornered, pressured to resign, or presented with termination documents, speak to someone early. It is usually easier to protect options before decisions become permanent.

If you are feeling cornered, you do not have to guess

When you are sick and HR starts moving fast, it is easy to make a decision you cannot take back. If something changed suddenly, or you are being pushed toward resignation, the safest first step is usually a calm review of your timeline and documents, so you know where you stand. Once you have clarity, you can choose the next step with less fear and more control.

Call 604-732-7678 (Free consultation. Phone first.)

Or use the contact form: https://timlouislaw.com/contact-us/

If your matter is urgent, calling is the fastest path.

General information only, not legal advice. Every situation is fact-specific.

Further reading and official resources

If you are dealing with a leave, an LTD claim, and job pressure at the same time, it helps to separate official rules from workplace opinions. The links below are starting points, plus Tim Louis & Company pages that connect the “what the law says” to “what to do next.”

Tim Louis & Company guides

Government and non-lawyer resources

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

About the author

Tim Louis, LLB

Long-Term Disability & Employment Lawyer · Vancouver, British Columbia

This guide was reviewed by Tim Louis, a Vancouver-based lawyer with over 40 years of experience helping British Columbians navigate long-term disability claims, accommodation, termination pressure, and evidence-driven next steps. If you are on disability leave and HR is moving quickly, the safest move is usually a calm review of your timeline, your medical restrictions, and your written record before you resign, sign anything, or respond to a sudden “performance” or “restructuring” narrative.

Focus: LTD benefits, EI timing, and duty to accommodate overlap
Serving: Vancouver and British Columbia
Professional profile: LinkedIn

General information only, not legal advice. Every situation is fact-specific.

🔁 This page is part of our Living Content System™ — a living visibility architecture powered by Total Visibility Architecture™ (TVA) and Aurascend™, maintained for accuracy, AI indexability, and trust signals for British Columbia disability, employment, and long-term disability overlap issues, including termination pressure during disability leave. 🕒 Last reviewed: by , Vancouver Long-Term Disability Lawyer.
What this guide covers: the LTD, EI sickness, and human rights accommodation overlap in BC, the four common termination-pressure patterns, what to document before you resign or sign anything, and the first 48 hours steps that protect your paper trail.
🧭 Review focus: evidence preservation before access is cut, calm written communication, “why” and accommodation process mapping, and keeping job status separate from benefit status.
🤝 Optimized with Fervid Solutions (Visibility · SEO · Marketing) to keep this page clear, discoverable, and genuinely useful when people need a next step.
Denied LTD in BC and Pressured to Return to Work? | Tim Louis
Employment Law
Tim Louis

Denied LTD in BC and Being Pressured

Denied LTD in BC and Being Pressured to Return to Work? long-term disability and employment overlap article Does a denied LTD claim mean you have to return to work? No. A denied LTD claim does not automatically mean you are medically able to return to work safely, reliably, and on

Read More »

Fired or pushed out while on disability in BC – your rights to severance, accommodation and LTD

fired while on disability in BC

Fired or pushed out while on disability in BC – your rights to severance, accommodation and LTD

If you were fired or pushed out while on disability, you are not alone

You might have been on sick leave, stress leave, long term disability, or another kind of medical leave when the email arrived or the meeting was called. Maybe you are still technically employed, but you feel constant pressure to come back before you are ready, or to “resign for health reasons.” Either way, it can feel like the ground underneath you has shifted all at once.

It is completely normal to be scared and angry. You may be worrying about how to pay the bills, whether your benefits or LTD will stop, and what you are supposed to tell your family. Many people in BC call me because they feel ashamed, as if being fired while on disability means they did something wrong. You did not cause this by getting sick or injured.

What often no one explains is that in British Columbia you still have rights, even if you were fired while on disability, pushed out on medical leave, or pressured during stress leave. Employment law, human rights law, and your long-term disability policy all continue to matter. There is usually more than one path forward, even if it feels overwhelming right now.

My goal in this guide is to slow everything down and walk you through your options, in plain language. You do not have to sort this out on your own. Tim Louis & Company offers a free consultation so you can talk through your situation with a lawyer who understands both employment law and LTD claims in BC.

Quick answer: can you be fired while on disability in BC?

The short answer is yes, you can sometimes be fired while on disability in BC, but not for just any reason. Your employer cannot legally fire you because of your disability or because you took job protected medical leave.

Three systems work together here. The BC Employment Standards Act gives you protected illness and injury leave and sets some minimum rules about termination and notice. The BC Human Rights Code says disability is a protected ground and requires employers to accommodate your medical limits to the point of undue hardship. On top of that, your long-term disability insurance and your employment contract create another layer of rights and obligations about income replacement and benefits.

When you are fired or pushed out while on disability, you are standing where all three of these systems meet. The rest of this article walks through how they fit together in real life and what practical steps you can take next.

How disability leave, LTD and employment law fit together in BC

When you are off work for health reasons, it can feel as if everything has blended into one problem. In reality, a few different systems are at play.

One piece is your medical leave from work. BC law gives many workers job protected illness and injury leave. Your employer may call it sick leave, disability leave or something else, but the basic idea is the same. You are off because of a medical condition, and you are not supposed to be punished for using that time.

Another piece is long term disability insurance. If you have LTD through your employer or a private policy, the insurer may pay a portion of your income while you cannot work. Being on LTD does not automatically end your job. It is common for people to remain employees on paper while they receive LTD benefits.

Layered over that is your actual employment relationship. Even when you are away, you still have rights around termination and severance. Factors like your age, length of service and type of work all matter when we look at whether you were treated fairly if the job ends.

These pieces overlap in important ways. Your employer still has a duty to accommodate your disability and to deal with you honestly while you are off. The insurer must follow the LTD policy and apply it in good faith. You continue to have rights under employment law and the BC Human Rights Code, even if you were fired while on LTD or during disability leave.

When people are scared and rushed, they are often pushed into decisions that quietly cut off severance, human rights remedies or future LTD payments. Understanding how these systems connect is the first step in protecting yourself before you resign, settle or sign anything.

fired while on long term disability

Fired while on disability: when termination is and is not allowed

In British Columbia, disability is protected under the BC Human Rights Code. That protection does not disappear just because you are off work. If you were fired while on disability, stress leave or medical leave, the key question is why the employer ended your job and what they did before they went that far.

An employer cannot legally fire you because you are sick, injured or using job protected medical leave. They also cannot treat termination as a shortcut instead of making a real effort to accommodate your limitations. If the real reason for the dismissal is your disability, or the employer simply did not want to deal with your restrictions, that can be discrimination.

There are situations where an employer can end employment while you are off. A genuine business closure, major restructuring, or elimination of a department may be allowed if the decision is truly unrelated to your health. Even then, they must handle the termination fairly and respect your rights to notice or severance.

The law expects employers to try reasonable accommodation before they give up on the relationship. That can include a gradual return to work, modified duties, shorter shifts, schedule changes, or moving certain tasks to other staff. Accommodation does not mean creating a perfect job or ignoring safety. It does mean taking your medical information seriously and exploring practical options instead of jumping straight to termination.

When an employer fires someone who is on disability leave without making those efforts, there may be grounds for a human rights claim as well as a wrongful dismissal claim. Even where a termination is allowed for business reasons, you may still be entitled to significant severance.

Pushed to quit while on disability: constructive dismissal in real life

Not everyone gets a clear termination letter. Many people on disability tell me, “I was not technically fired, but I felt pushed out.” In law, that kind of situation can be called constructive dismissal. It means your employer has changed your job or the way they treat you so much that they have ended the relationship even if they never use the word “fired.”

For workers on disability or medical leave, being pushed out often looks like pressure that builds over time. You may be told it would be “best for everyone” if you resign for health reasons. You might receive an ultimatum: return to full time work by a certain date or your employer will treat you as having quit. Some people come back from stress leave or LTD to find they have been quietly demoted, had their hours cut, or lost long standing responsibilities. Others face coldness, sarcasm or open hostility once they try to return.

When you are exhausted and unwell, quitting can seem like the only way to make the pressure stop. That is exactly why resignation is so risky. If you sign a resignation letter or send an email saying you are leaving, you may weaken or lose your claim to severance. Your disability insurer may argue that you chose to end your own employment and that this affects your LTD benefits.

The important thing to remember is that the law looks at what actually happened, not just what label your employer uses. Serious unwanted changes, or a toxic environment that no reasonable person would tolerate, can be treated as a dismissal even if no one says the word. Quitting should almost never be your first step. Before you resign or agree that you “voluntarily” left, talk to a lawyer about whether what you are experiencing may already be constructive dismissal.

What happens to your long-term disability if the job ends

One of the scariest questions people ask me is, “If my job is gone, do I lose my long-term disability?” The honest answer is that it depends on your policy and your situation, but in many cases LTD does not stop just because employment ends.

If your LTD claim is already approved, the insurer usually keeps paying as long as you continue to meet the medical test in the policy and you cooperate with reasonable treatment and reporting. The benefit is tied to your disability, not to whether the employer keeps you on payroll forever. That said, every policy is written a little differently, so it is important to have someone look at the wording before you make big decisions.

If you are still applying, appealing, or fighting a denial, a termination can complicate things, but it does not automatically destroy your LTD claim. Insurers sometimes try to argue that if your job ended, you were not really disabled from it, or that you could work somewhere else. The timeline of symptoms, medical notes, leave and termination becomes very important.

When a job ends, many people also lose extended health and dental coverage that was attached to their group benefits plan. That loss can hurt just as much as the job itself, especially if you rely on expensive medications or therapy.

Be very careful with any severance package that asks you to sign a broad release of “all claims.” Without meaning to, you could give up your right to pursue LTD, human rights remedies or other important claims. Before you sign anything, get legal advice from someone who understands both employment law and long-term disability.

Common pressure tactics – and how to respond

When you are on disability leave, pressure from your workplace can feel relentless. Here are some of the tactics people often face, and some practical ways to respond.

“We need your resignation so we can backfill your position.”

You do not have to resign to make life easier for your employer. A resignation can cut off severance and weaken other claims. You can reply that you are following medical advice, that you wish to keep your employment status unchanged for now, and that you will not be making a decision about resignation without legal advice.

“Sign this package by Friday or it will be withdrawn.”

Short deadlines are there to push you into signing before you understand the consequences. You can respond in writing that you have received the offer and will need time to review it with a lawyer. Reasonable employers accept that, and if they do not, it tells us a lot about how they operate.

“Your doctor must clear you for full duties right away or we will treat this as job abandonment.”

Your employer is entitled to basic medical information about your limits, but they are not entitled to ignore your doctor’s restrictions. Ask your doctor to provide clear functional limitations in writing and send those notes to your employer. Confirm by email that you are not abandoning your job and that you remain available for suitable, medically approved work.

Refusing to accept updated medical notes or ignoring your emails.

When you provide reasonable information and the employer refuses to engage, that can help your case later. Keep copies of everything you send and try to communicate in writing. If they ignore you, do not give up; keep a simple record of dates, messages and responses.

In all of these situations, try not to resign, do not sign complex documents without advice, and do not disappear. Staying calm, documenting what happens, and getting early legal guidance can make a major difference to the outcome.

Steps to protect yourself if you were fired or pushed out while on disability

When your job and your health collide, it is easy to feel frozen. A few concrete steps can protect your rights while you figure out what comes next.

  1. Step 1: Gather your documents
    Collect your employment papers in one place. That includes your employment contract, offer letters and job descriptions. Add termination or resignation documents, emails, text messages and any notes from meetings. Keep copies of medical notes, doctor’s letters and your long-term disability policy.
  2. Step 2: Write out what happened
    Create a simple timeline. Start with when your symptoms began, when you first missed work, and when you went on medical or disability leave. Add dates for every major event: requests for accommodation, return to work plans, pressure to come back, and any threats about job abandonment or resignation. Small details you note now may matter a lot later.
  3. Step 3: Do not resign or sign anything new without advice
    In BC, a quick resignation or signed package can wipe out claims for severance, human rights remedies or LTD. Employers and insurers know this. Take the pressure off yourself by deciding you will not sign or send anything important until you have spoken with a lawyer.
  4. Step 4: Talk to a lawyer who understands both LTD and employment
    Your situation sits at the intersection of disability law and employment law. A combined approach means your severance, human rights and LTD strategy work together instead of by accident pulling against each other. Contact Tim Louis for a fee consultation today.
  5. Step 5: Remember there are deadlines
    There are time limits for starting court claims, filing human rights complaints and appealing LTD denials. Some are quite short. You do not need to know all the exact dates today, but you do need to move soon enough that you do not lose options simply because time ran out.

When the job really ends: frustration of contract and long absences

Sometimes employers say, “Your employment is frustrated because you have been off too long.” It sounds harsh, and it is a real concept in law. Frustration of contract means the job has become impossible to continue because of a change no one reasonably planned for. In the disability context, it usually refers to a very serious, long-term condition that makes a return to work unlikely in the foreseeable future.

Whether frustration truly applies is a fact heavy question. Courts look at how long you have been off, what your medical team says about the future and, very importantly, what your employer did to try to accommodate you. A company that never explored modified duties or gradual return plans will have a much harder time relying on frustration.

Long term disability benefits are part of the picture. If your employment contract and benefit plan already contemplated that some workers would be off on LTD for extended periods, courts sometimes treat that as a sign that long absences were not completely unexpected.

The key message is simple. Even if your employer tells you the contract is “frustrated” and offers little or no severance, you should have the situation reviewed. In many cases there are still arguments about severance, human rights remedies or LTD that can make a real difference to your financial future.

Real outcomes: how BC cases are decided

Results in this area are not theoretical. BC courts and tribunals look at real workplaces, real illnesses and real decisions by employers.

In one type of case, a worker goes on stress leave after months of conflict. The employer makes little effort to understand the medical limits, rejects suggestions for gradual return and soon sends a termination letter that blames “fit” or “performance.” When the facts are laid out, decision makers may find that disability played a central role, leading to severance plus additional human rights damages for discrimination.

In another type of case, a worker has been on long term disability for years. Medical reports say there is no realistic prospect of returning to any work. The employer eventually ends the employment relationship, but LTD benefits continue because the worker still meets the policy test. The court looks closely at whether the contract was truly frustrated and whether any severance is still appropriate.

These examples are not promises. They are reminders that outcomes depend on the full story, not just one letter or one meeting. Every case is unique. Bring your facts, your documents and your questions. A careful review can help you understand where you stand and what realistic options you have.

FAQs

Can my employer fire me while I am on disability leave in BC?

They cannot legally fire you because of your disability or because you used protected medical leave. In some cases, they can end employment for genuine business reasons, but your rights to severance and human rights protection still apply.

Do my long-term disability benefits stop if I am fired?

In many cases LTD continues as long as you meet the medical test in the policy, even if your job ends. The exact answer depends on your policy wording and the facts, so it is important to have it reviewed.

What if my employer pushes me to resign while I am on sick leave?

Pressure to “resign for health reasons” or accept that you have quit can be a sign of constructive dismissal. Do not resign before getting legal advice, especially if you are on disability leave in BC.

What is constructive dismissal for someone on disability?

Constructive dismissal happens when your employer changes your job or treatment so much that it is as if you were fired, even without a termination letter. For people on disability, that often looks like ultimatums, demotions, or a hostile return to work.

Should I sign a severance package while I am on LTD or medical leave?

Not without advice. A quick signature can quietly give up your rights to full severance, human rights remedies or future LTD benefits, so have a lawyer review any package before you agree.

Next steps – talk to a lawyer who understands both LTD and employment

If you were fired or pushed out while on disability, this did not happen because you got sick or injured. You are allowed to ask for help and to take your situation seriously.

The questions you are facing sit at the overlap of long-term disability, employment law and human rights. This is the work Tim Louis & Company does every day. Tim has spent decades helping people in BC who are off work on LTD, stress leave or medical leave, and need clear, plain advice about what to do next. There is no pressure and no judgment. The goal is to help you understand your rights so you can make calm decisions.

If you would like to talk through your options, contact us for a free consultation. You can call Tim Louis & Company at (604) 732-7678, email timlouis@timlouislaw.com, or use the contact form on our website. Services are available in English and Spanish. A short conversation can give you a clearer picture of where you stand and what realistic steps are available.

Further reading and resources

Some people feel better when they can read more before they reach out. If that sounds like you, these guides are a good starting point.

If you like to understand the systems before you pick up the phone, these materials can help. When you are ready, we are here to walk through your own facts and next steps with you.

🔁 This page is part of our Living Content System™, a visibility architecture powered by the Total Visibility Architecture™ (TVA) and Aurascend™, continuously updated for accuracy, AI indexability, trust signals, and BC legal compliance for long-term disability and employment law issues.
🕒 Last reviewed: by Tim Louis,
🤝 Optimized with Fervid Solutions (Visibility · SEO · Marketing)
Denied LTD in BC and Pressured to Return to Work? | Tim Louis
Employment Law
Tim Louis

Denied LTD in BC and Being Pressured

Denied LTD in BC and Being Pressured to Return to Work? long-term disability and employment overlap article Does a denied LTD claim mean you have to return to work? No. A denied LTD claim does not automatically mean you are medically able to return to work safely, reliably, and on

Read More »
Scroll to top