2. Know your rights if OW comes to your home

The Ontario Human Rights Commission has released their latest take on mandatory vaccines, passports and testing, here: http://www.ohrc.on.ca/en/news_centre/ohrc-policy-statement-covid-19-vaccine-mandates-and-proof-vaccine-certificates. In light of this update, and the new directives that the Province released a few weeks ago, we are in the process of updating our covid testing content. Please re-visit the site to access the updated content when it is available.

Most of the time, workers from Ontario Works (OW) can come into your home only if you let them in.

The only time they can enter without being let in is if they get a search warrant from a judge or a justice of the peace. This is very unusual.

But OW can refuse to give you assistance or cut off your assistance if you don’t let them in, unless you have a “valid reason”.

Asking OW to come back at another time

If you have what OW says is a “valid reason”, you can ask them to visit your home at another time. Here are some examples of valid reasons:

  • you or someone in your home is sick
  • you have visitors and do not want them to know that you applied for OW
  • the visit affects a religious practice, such as a religious holiday, prayer, or ritual
  • you’re on your way out for something you can’t miss, such as a job or a medical appointment

When OW is in your home

When an OW worker is in your home, they can look only at things that are in “plain view”. This means that they can’t open and look inside places where you keep things, like closets, drawers, or the refrigerator.

Hide this website