Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Government Introducing Legislation That Would Allow Prosecution Of Employers If Workers Injured

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2015 04:14 PM
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government is introducing legislation that would allow for the prosecution of negligent employers whose actions seriously injure or kill workers.
     
    Labour Minister Shirley Bond said the legislation she was expected to table Wednesday will allow for on-the-spot penalties and is based on recommendations in a report into two separate sawmill explosions that killed four workers in 2012.
     
    She said provisions will not include naming non-compliant employers because of privacy issues, but that information would become public anyway through any court process.
     
    "There is policy work underway but there are a number of mechanisms in the bill that will deal with those employers that are blatantly and continuously out of compliance."
     
    WorkSafeBC administrator Gord Macatee said the bill provides exactly what he intended in the report he forwarded to the government last July.
     
    He said staff have received training involving searches and seizures, warrants and forensic interviewing and that a second team will take over when there's the potential for liability involving workplace incidents.
     
    Bond called the legislation transformative, saying it would give judges the ability to rule that an employer will not continue operating in a particular industry.
     
    "I want families to know today that it is intended to improve worker safety so that we don't have others face the horrific circumstances that they have faced," she said.
     
    Accumulation of combustible dust at the mills is believed to be a major contributing factor in both mill explosions.
     
    Macatee said 96 mills that did not have compliance issues have voluntarily taken part in a daily inspection program, with weekly reporting to WorkSafe.
     
    "It really underlines the seriousness with which the industry has taken the combustible dust issue," he said.
     
    The Crown declined to approve charges against Babine Forest Products in Burns Lake and Lakeland Mills in Prince George, in part over concerns that evidence collected by WorkSafeBC wouldn't be admissible in court.
     
    Inquests into both blasts are scheduled — starting next month in the Lakeland Mills case and in July for the Babine explosion. 

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both

    Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both
    OTTAWA — One of Stephen Harper's most experienced ministers resigned his plum foreign affairs post Tuesday, leaving a void around the Conservative cabinet table at a critical juncture in both domestic and international affairs.

    Baird's exit creates hole at home, abroad at crucial time for both

    Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26

    Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26
    TORONTO — Lawyers for Jian Ghomeshi appeared briefly in a Toronto courtroom this morning to set a new date in his headline-grabbing sexual assault case.

    Ghomeshi lawyer appears in Toronto court, next hearing on Feb. 26

    Toronto Zoo's polar bear cup moving to Winnipeg zoo to be with other bears

    Toronto Zoo's polar bear cup moving to Winnipeg zoo to be with other bears
    TORONTO — The Toronto Zoo's baby polar bear is ready to leave home.

    Toronto Zoo's polar bear cup moving to Winnipeg zoo to be with other bears

    Drug traffickers mixed cocaine with asphalt powder to hide drugs: RCMP

    Drug traffickers mixed cocaine with asphalt powder to hide drugs: RCMP
    MONTREAL — The Mounties say they've broken up a cocaine trafficking ring that was employing an unorthodox way of smuggling their product.

    Drug traffickers mixed cocaine with asphalt powder to hide drugs: RCMP

    Via Rail terror suspect said 'we are being watched,' trial hears

    Via Rail terror suspect said 'we are being watched,' trial hears
    TORONTO — An undercover FBI officer has told the trial of two men accused of plotting to derail a train travelling between Canada and the U.S. that one of them warned him at their first meeting that they were being watched.

    Via Rail terror suspect said 'we are being watched,' trial hears

    Educating Omar Khadr: 'Just doing what we do,' Christian university says

    Educating Omar Khadr: 'Just doing what we do,' Christian university says
    TORONTO — Taking in former Guantanamo Bay inmate and government-branded terrorist Omar Khadr as a student would dovetail perfectly with how King's University sees itself, the school says.

    Educating Omar Khadr: 'Just doing what we do,' Christian university says