Category Archives: Uncategorized

WorkSafeNB launches “It’s Your Job” student video contest

SAINT JOHN, N.B. — WorkSafeNB, in co-operation with the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety, has begun hosting the “It’s Your Job” student video contest, challenging high school students in the province to create a two-minute, original video that illustrates the importance of working safely. Winners of the New Brunswick video contest will be automatically entered into the national “It’s Your Job” student video contest to compete against high school winners from across the country and be viewed by Canadians coast-to-coast during voting in May 2015, WorkSafeNB said in a statement. For contest rules and entry forms, visit www.youthsafenb.ca/en/nomercy/its_your_job.aspx. The deadline for entries is April 10.

Inquest into miner deaths announced

SUDBURY, Ont. — Dr. Reuven Jhirad, deputy chief coroner of the Office of the Chief Coroner for Ontario, announced on Jan. 6 that an inquest would be held into the deaths of two miners in 2011. Jason Chenier, 35, and Jordan Fram, 26, died on June 9, 2011 after they were buried by a run of muck at Vale’s Stobie Mine in Sudbury. A statement from the Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services said that the inquest was set to begin on April 20 and last 10 days. As usual, the inquest jury may make recommendations aimed at preventing similar deaths from occurring.

Man arrested after assault on police officer

TORONTO, Ont. — The Toronto Police Service (TPS) announced on Jan. 5 that it had arrested a man in connection with an assault on an officer. At about 10:30 p.m. on Dec. 23, plainclothes officers were investigating the recently reported theft of a vehicle, the TPS said in a statement. The officers allegedly approached a vehicle parked at an apartment building, and the passenger surrendered to officers without incident. Police alleged the driver had struck one of the officers with the vehicle while fleeing, causing non-life-threatening injuries. Kirisanth Pathmanathan, 24, was arrested on Jan. 3 and charged with 13 counts, including assault on a peace officer, assault with intent to resist arrest, dangerous driving, failing to comply with probation and two counts of theft under $5,000.

Safety Services Manitoba hosts SAFE Work Conference

Safety Services Manitoba will be hosting its SAFE Work Conference at the Victoria Inn Hotel & Convention Centre in Winnipeg on Jan. 21 and 22. The conference will feature over 550 delegates, 28 workshop presentations and 40 trade show exhibitors. Topics include fall protection awareness, creating an inclusive and effective labour market, communicating with difficult people and distracted driving. For more information, visit http://www.safetyservicesmanitoba.ca/safework2015/.

Safety culture conference announced

The Saskatchewan Association for Safe Workplaces in Health (SASWH) will be hosting Engagement = A Strong Safety Culture in Saskatoon on March 25. The one day conference and SASWH annual general meeting will be held in galleries C and D at TCU Place. The conference, intended for healthcare workers and employers, will feature Jan Wachter, CSP, CIH and associate professor in the Department of Safety Sciences at the Indiana University of Pennsylvania as the keynote speaker. He will discuss “harnessing worker and employer engagement in workplace safety.” Michael Kerr, known as the “Workplace Energizer,” will be the closing speaker. For more information, visit www.saswh.ca. To register, visit https://s235.z2systems.com/np/clients/s235/eventRegistration.jsp?event=1&.

Police association calls for full workers’ compensation for officers

The Royal Newfoundland Constabulary Association (RNCA), which represents police officers in the province, is calling for changes to workplace health and safety legislation to allow full compensation for injured officers.

Currently, officers receive 80 per cent of their pre-injury net earnings, to a maximum gross of $61,615 as of Jan. 1, according to Vanessa Colman-Sadd, director of communications with Service NL, but the RNCA wants that increased to 100 per cent.

Colman-Sadd said that the department had recently gone through a statutory review process for Newfoundland and Labrador’s compensation system, during which the RNCA had made their request for full coverage for officers injured in the course of their duties. However, the Workplace Health, Safety and Compensation Commission’s Statutory Review Committee did not make that recommendation to government in its final report, Colman-Sadd said.

“There is no province in Canada [that] provides a wage-loss benefit of 100 per cent of pre-injury net earning exclusively to police officers,” she noted. “There are six provinces [that] allow employers to top up, though, for all injured workers,” she added, stressing that RCMP officers are covered federally and that the compensation issue applies only to Royal Newfoundland Constabulary officers.

Colman-Sadd noted that changing legislation to allow for full compensation or top-ups “would result in significant costs to employers and the workers’ compensation system, whether that’s for RNC or all injured workers. As well, any changes made to the workers’ compensation system must take a balanced approach, considering the needs of workers and employers.”

Doug Cadigan, president of the St. John’s Fire Fighters Association, said that the association “fully supports” the RNCA’s position. He said that he believes that emergency responders who are injured in the course of their duties while responding to or at an emergency should receive 100 per cent of their salary while recovering. “We think emergency responders are unique in that unlike all other workers in the province, once we begin responding to an emergency, we no longer have control of our workplace.”

Cadigan noted that while it is the responsibility of employers to ensure workers have a safe environment, it has been proven in the past that “this cannot be accomplished” at a fire or other emergency.

Nurse assaulted at Toronto’s CAMH in wake of oh&s charges

Less than a week after Ontario’s Ministry of Labour (MOL) filed charges against the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH) in Toronto, regarding a violent incident last January, the facility experienced yet another patient assault against one of its employees.

On Dec. 23, the MOL filed four counts against CAMH under the province’s Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA), relating to an assault that occurred on Jan. 12 of last year. CAMH is facing charges, as an employer, of failing to:

  • provide proper information, instruction and supervision to ensure the safety of a worker;
  • take every reasonable precaution to protect an employee from violence;
  • establish and implement sufficient measures and procedures to protect workers from the risk of violence; and
  • establish safety measures and procedures in writing.

“A nurse was attacked by a patient while carrying out observation rounds,” said MOL media representative William Lin, describing the incident that led to the charges. “The first court appearance is to be heard on February 5th.”

Another nurse was critically injured at the facility on Dec. 29, when a patient pushed her down to the floor and punched her in the head repeatedly. “The worker was transported to St. Michael’s Hospital, and a police report was filed by the employer,” explained Lin. “We assigned an inspector who immediately contacted the workplace.”

According to Lin, the MOL didn’t receive notification of the Dec. 29 incident until the afternoon of the following day. Section 51(1) of OHSA requires employers to report critical injuries to the ministry “immediately.”

Rani Srivastava, CAMH’s chief of nursing and professional practice, confirmed that the MOL had visited the worksite on Dec. 31. “We had a really good meeting with them, and at this point, we’re just continuing to work with them very closely,” she said.

Srivastava could not provide further information on the Dec. 29 incident, due to the ongoing investigation. But she expressed disappointment that the MOL had charged them for the previous attack.

“Everyone at CAMH was very shaken by that particular incident,” she said. “I feel for the nurse that was attacked, who was hurt, as well as her colleagues who were also harmed, whether they were directly involved in the incident or they were witnesses. We know that physical violence can happen.”

Linda Haslam-Stroud, president of the Ontario Nurses’ Association (ONA), noted that there had been 453 incidents of physical assault or abuse at CAMH over the 2013-14 fiscal year alone. “Violence is not part of our jobs, and it shouldn’t be accepted as part of our jobs,” she said. “If we’re going to reduce the incidences of violence, it can’t be kind of an after-the-fact type of resolution. We need to be putting measures and procedures, obviously, in place on a proactive basis.”

Ontario has seen an escalation of violence in healthcare facilities, she added, citing similar attacks and assaults at the Southlake Regional Health Centre in Newmarket (COHSN, Dec. 15) and a nurse stabbing at the Brockville Mental Health Centre.

“Part of ONA’s strategy for the upcoming year is a renewed violence strategy that will be encompassing everything,” explained Haslam-Stroud, “right from the communication of the issues to the public, to working with the government, to trying to ensure that our joint health and safety committees are fulfilling their obligations.”

CAMH has also been taking steps to counter workplace violence, according to Srivastava. Last year, the facility formed a committee consisting of its own team members and reps of unions, clinical operations and human resources, aiming to create a safer work environment at CAMH. “They’re coming together to discuss ideas, explore solutions and see what strategies or what ideas can come from that,” she said. “They’re looking at their own ideas; they’re looking at what other organizations are doing.”

The facility also plans to revise its debriefing processes, improve training and education for staff on preventing and handling aggressive patient behaviour and provide emotional support for traumatized employees, Srivastava added. “Patient safety and staff safety are really important things to us, and they go hand in hand.

“That includes caring for our staff, and the only way,” she said, “is if we’re able to work together and have that dialogue about, ‘How do we make sure we’re providing the best possible care, in an environment that supports our staff in the best possible way?’”

N.S. offshore oil and gas workers covered under one set of oh&s rules

Offshore oil and gas workers in Nova Scotia are now covered under one set of occupational health and safety rules.

Amendments to the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Resources Accord Implementation (Nova Scotia) Act came into effect on Dec. 31. Among other changes, the amendments: add a new oh&s section to the act; clarify the roles and responsibilities of governments, regulators, employers and employees; and assign authority for oh&s officers to the Canada-Nova Scotia Offshore Petroleum Board. Mirror amendments were adopted federally in the Offshore Health and Safety Act and in Newfoundland and Labrador.

“Nova Scotia’s offshore is one of the fastest-growing sectors in Atlantic Canada and represents huge potential for our province,” said Nova Scotia Energy Minister Andrew Younger in a joint press release from the provincial Department of Energy and Department of Labour and Advanced Education. “These changes complement the work already underway to promote workplace safety in every industry across Nova Scotia, to ensure all workers, whether on land or sea, return home safely at the end of each day.”

The press release added that the amendments apply to all offshore petroleum activities in the province. They also “support an occupational health and safety culture that recognizes shared responsibilities in the workplace”; provide joint management of oh&s by federal and provincial governments; ensure that oh&s applies to workers in transit to, from or between offshore platforms; and add new provincial oversight to the Department of Labour and Advanced Education for offshore oh&s.

Tony Cornect, Minister of Service NL, said that the amendments were tailored to the offshore working environment and incorporated fundamental oh&s principles, including a worker’s right to refusal, right to know and reprisal protection for raising health and safety concerns.

Canada’s offshore petroleum production accounts for 25 per cent of light crude output, or six per cent of Canada’s annual total crude output, according to Natural Resources Canada.

 

 

 

 

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