Trevor2136 said:
In other words, if you give 2 weeks notice and your boss is pissed off and says just leave right now the company has to pay you for 2 weeks of work.
This works out in the end to be a case of your boss terminating your employment and having to pay you in lieu of notice.
Unless you have a contract that contains exit payments even in the event that you quit, and these can be found in high responsibility positions in industry or government, then severence does not arise if you quit.
So, excepting the above,
Severance arises only if you are let go. The longer the period of service, the more severance money is paid. Note the language of sonoman's post, the word used is termination; in other words, when the employer terminates or ends the employee's employment.
Exerpt From Osler's Doing Business in Canada..... (my bolding)
Severance Pay: The federal and Ontario jurisdictions also set out severance pay requirements for employees. In Ontario, severance pay is in addition to notice of termination or termination pay. It must be paid to employees with five or more years of service
where:
Any employee is terminated or laid off by an employer with an annual payroll of $2.5 million or more; or
Where 50 or more
employees are terminated in a period of six months or less because of the permanent discontinuance of all or part of the business of the employer at an establishment.
Severance pay in Ontario is based upon one week’s pay for each year of service to a maximum of 26 weeks. The legislation provides credit for partial years of employment.
Under the federal legislation, an employee who has worked 12 consecutive months is entitled to severance pay based upon two days’ wages at the regular rate of pay per year of service, or five days’ regular wages, whichever is greater.