Using Canadian data, this paper replicates Addison and Portugal's (1989) study of the relation between unemployment duration and the wage losses of displaced workers in the U.S. We use the Canadian survey of displaced workers, which is almost identical in its design to the one used by Addison and Portugal for the U.S. We show that, unlike in the U.S., no significant and consistent effect of unemployment duration on wage losses of displaced workers can be found in Canada, once the simultaneity bias and unobserved heterogeneity are correctly accounted for. As in the U.S. study, we show that displaced workers with high tenure loose most from displacement in Canada. This effect appears despite lower return to tenure in Canada.