November 22, 2011

Ontario Bill 160 changes safety committee rules, labour guidelines: Lawyer

OHSA amendments impacts safety committees and labour guideline use

Now that the Ontario government has amended its Occupational Health and Safety Act , construction firms defending themselves in court will be able to use guidelines issued by the Ministry of Labour, according to a speaker at a recent Toronto conference.

“That’s an important change, because previously these Ministry of Labour guidelines, that are just on websites, did not have the force of law,” said Ryan Conlin, an employment lawyer with Stringer Brisbin Humphrey.

Conlin made his comments during a presentation on Bill 160, the law passed by the Ontario Legislature earlier this year that changed Ontario’s Occupational Health and Safety Act, at the 25th annual employers’ conference at the Toronto Congress Centre.

Bill 160 was passed after recommendations from an expert panel, led by Tony Dean, reviewed Ontario’s occupational health and safety system. One of those changes was the creation of a chief prevention officer (CPO) who reports to the Minister of Labour. The CPO, Conlin said, could approve ministry guidelines as standards which could be used as a defence in court.

Conlin said in a previous court case, he and a colleague were arguing in court over whether their client was considered a “constructor.”

“We were trying to rely on a publication, the Ministry of Labour Constructor Guideline, a missive on the website about who is or is not a constructor, and the Ministry’s lawyer stood up in court with a straight face and said, ‘That’s just the guideline for what the ministry says; usually we look at the law.’ So somehow the ministry’s own guideline is somehow not germane to who is or is not the constructor.”

But with Bill 160 in force, court cases could be different, he suggested, because guidelines approved by the CPO could be used as defences in court.

Conlin said the new chief prevention officer, George Gritziotis, is a “highly-qualified individual from all accounts.”

His appointment, Conlin said, “has been generally welcomed in the occupational health and safety community as a very credible person to be fulfilling that role.”

Bill 160 also mandated the appointment of a chief prevention council, which “has the potential to be a very important organization” because it will have the power to make recommendations to the labour minister on occupational health and safety.

“These kinds of blue ribbon panels, so to speak, are important when they have the ear of the government,” Conlin said.

“I don’t think there’s any question, since the Liberal government was re-elected, that the prevention council will have the ear of the government. Their recommendations will be taken seriously.”

He also noted companies with fewer than 20 employees, who have health and safety representatives rather than full joint occupational health and safety committees (JOSH), now have to train those reps. Conlin described the previous lack of a requirement to train health and safety reps as “a bizarre legal mistake.”

Conlin warned employers should be diligent in responding to recommendations from their corporations’ safety committees, especially now that Bill 160 allows the union co-chair, or the worker chair of a JOSH committee to make a recommendation directly to the employer if no consensus recommendation is reached by the committee. Prior to Bill 160, Conlin said, the intent was to build a consensus within the JOSH committee before making a recommendation.

“If some of you ever get a very active member of the joint health and safety committee, you could have a lot of recommendations,” Conlin said.

“For those of you who get Ministry of Labour inspections, as you will from time to time, what’s the first thing the inspector always asks to see? The minutes of the health and safety committee meeting and the recommendations to the employer. So there’s no surer way to flag an issue than having those minutes include a recommendation to an employer.”

Conlin added the response to the committee must be detailed.

“There’s no question that the issues being raised by the worker representative will be reviewed and subject to scrutiny by the Ontario Ministry of Labour and if there’s some validity to these complaints, they could be the subject of enforcement activity, up to and including charges,” he said.

“There does not have to be an accident for them to lay charges.

Print | Comment

RECENT VIDEOS

VIDEO: Journal of Commerce Weekly Update May 21, 2012

In this week's preview of the upcoming stories we’re coving at the Journal of Commerce, editor Bradley Fehr covers topics such as how the boom in the Albert a oil sands is leading to companies stockpiling aggregate.

VIDEO: Highlights from the May 18 Daily Commercial News

EllisDon Corp. is about to start construction on a performing arts centre at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, while critics are taking issue with the new classes of membership by the Ontario College of Trades. Find out more in the May 18 Daily Commercial News.

VIDEO: Common ladder safety errors in construction

Bruce Bolduc, owner of Construction Workplace Safety Training Ltd., recently gave a seminar near Toronto on ladder safety in construction. He talked about some of the common errors with ladder use, such as overextending and overloading ladders, and a new Ontario Ministry of Labour position paper.

VIDEO: Highlights from the May 17 Daily Commercial News

The May 17 issue of the Daily Commercial News has reaction from Merit Canada and labour groups to Bill C-377, An Act to Amend the Income Tax Act (labour organizations), which is currently before the House of Commons finance committee.

Where does labour law stand on ladder safety?

The Ontario Ministry of Labour recently issued a new position paper on the use of ladders in construction, and workplace safety experts warn employers need to train their workers and assess their sites for risk.

Ontario Technological Skills Competition in Waterloo a “pressure cooker”

1,900 students from across Ontario competed in 63 career fields at the 23rd annual Ontario Technological Skills Competition (OTSC) in RIM Park and Manulife Sportsplex in Waterloo. Most gold medal winners will advance to the Skills Canada National Competition in Edmonton May 13 to 16. Winners will form Team Canada to participate in the 2013 WorldSkills International Competition in Leipzig, Germany.

VIDEO: BC Hydro's massive "Regeneration" initiative

In 2011, BC Hydro announced their "Regeneration" initiative, an effort to overhaul the province’s aging infrastructure in order to meet substantially higher energy demands in the coming decades.

VIDEO: Journal of Commerce Weekly Update May 14th, 2012

In this week's preview of the upcoming stories we're covering in the Journal of Commerce, Editor Bradley Fehr talks about our upcoming Energy feature, which highlights electrical and oil and gas projects across western Canada.

VIDEO: Canstruction 2012 in Vancouver

Every year architects, engineers, students and many others take simple canned foods and turn them into amazing structures and works of art for Canstruction.

MOST POPULAR STORIES
TODAY’S TOP CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS

These projects have been selected from 455 projects with a total value of $1,378,405,540 that Reed Construction Data Building Reports reported on Thursday.

COMMERCIAL OFFICE BUILDING, RETAIL

$55,000,000 Ottawa ON Negotiated

TOWNHOUSE AND CONDOMINIUM APARTMENT DEVELOPMENT

$43,000,000 Clarington ON CANCELLED/ DEFERRED

ROADWORK & STRUCTURE

$23,000,000 Ottawa-Carleton Reg ON Tenders

Daily Top 10