Compliance failures don’t look the same in every sector. From trucking fleets to healthcare providers, each industry faces unique vulnerabilities that can lead to steep fines, multi-year suspensions, and permanent damage to your reputation.
This guide explores the most common mistakes, backed by real enforcement cases, and how you can protect your business.
The transportation sector consistently records some of the highest penalties in Canada. Regulators pay close attention to trucking companies because of complex work schedules, cross-border operations, and frequent overtime.
In 2024, a cluster of trucking companies in BC was fined over $2.4 million combined for inconsistent logs and unverified wage records, showing regulators’ willingness to issue maximum penalties for repeated lapses.
Construction companies face heightened compliance risks due to subcontracting layers, rapidly changing job duties, and high turnover.
Construction firms that allow layered subcontracting often lose visibility over whether foreign workers are being properly supervised and paid, setting up the “toxic combination” that leads to severe penalties.
An Ontario construction company was suspended from hiring foreign workers for five years after inspectors found incomplete contracts, wage violations, and repeated failure to cooperate.
Healthcare providers face additional compliance challenges, especially around licensing and credential verification across provinces.
Compliance inspections intersect with privacy obligations. Healthcare employers must share records while protecting patient information under provincial health data laws.
An Alberta long-term care facility was fined over $150,000 for failing to produce evidence of staff licensing and professional development, despite multiple reminders.
Fast-scaling tech companies sometimes underestimate how quickly compliance can unravel.
A Vancouver SaaS firm received a $100,000 fine after audits revealed contracts lacking clear wage details and roles not supported by LMIA exemptions.
Manufacturing employers often rely on large seasonal workforces, making consistent record-keeping especially challenging.
Seasonal production peaks often tempt companies to take shortcuts, especially in training records and updating job duties, creating the conditions for repeated violations.
A Quebec manufacturer was suspended from the TFWP after inspectors found employees working outside their NOC codes and receiving unrecorded overtime. These issues persisted for over two years.
Some employers appear repeatedly on Canada’s non-compliance list. The Canadian Brewhouse chain, for example, appeared seven times across related entities, demonstrating that penalties alone don’t always drive compliance. This pattern signals systemic issues: poor internal controls, lack of accountability, and a culture of treating LMIA requirements as optional.
Case Highlights:
No company is too large or too reputable to avoid scrutiny. In many cases, the reputational damage far exceeds the monetary fine.
Concerned about fines or suspensions? Book a free immigration compliance audit with the experts on our team.