Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Psychiatric Hospital Fined $650,000 For Failing To Protect Its Workers In B.C.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Jan, 2019 09:40 PM

    RICHMOND, B.C. — WorkSafeBC has fined the Forensic Psychiatric Hospital almost $650,000 for failing to protect the safety of its workers.


    The workplace safety agency says the fine is the largest such administrative penalty and was imposed because the hospital in Port Coquitlam didn't ensure the safety of its workers with adequate risk assessments, policies and training to prevent violence.


    The hospital is a 190-bed facility that treats and rehabilitates people who come into contact with the law but are deemed unfit to stand trial or not criminally responsible for a crime because of a mental disorder.


    The BC Nurses Union says the penalty stems from separate incidents involving nurses last year and that both nurses remain physically and mentally traumatized by the attacks.


    WorkSafeBC says in a statement that the same employer has received an administrative penalty for related violations in the last three years.


    The union says the decision validates concerns that nurses have been reporting at the facility for years and the employer is now moving in the right direction by hiring forensics safety officers.


    No one from the Provincial Health Services Authority, which oversees the facility, was immediately available to comment on the fine.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New H1-B Visa Rule Change To Impact IT Companies, Hiring Of Indians

    New H1-B Visa Rule Change To Impact IT Companies, Hiring Of Indians
    Under the proposed amendments, USCIS would first select the 65,000 visas from the cumulative pool of regular as well as advance degree holder applicants and 20,000 highly skilled H1-B visas would then be allotted among the remaining pool of unselected advance degree holder applicants.  

    New H1-B Visa Rule Change To Impact IT Companies, Hiring Of Indians

    Canadian Actors Push For More Diversity In Television, Film Casting

    Canadian Actors Push For More Diversity In Television, Film Casting
    VANCOUVER — Raugi Yu was thrilled when he nabbed an audition to play a French ambassador. It was about 15 years ago, early in his acting career, and a rare time he'd been welcomed to try out for a role not specifically written for an Asian actor.    

    Canadian Actors Push For More Diversity In Television, Film Casting

    B.C.'s Anesthesiologists Say Surgery Wait List Has Grown Faster Than Population

    B.C.'s Anesthesiologists Say Surgery Wait List Has Grown Faster Than Population
    VANCOUVER — Anesthesiologists in British Columbia say the waiting list for medically necessary surgeries has grown to more than 85,000 patients.

    B.C.'s Anesthesiologists Say Surgery Wait List Has Grown Faster Than Population

    Right-Wing, White Supremacist Groups An Increasing Concern For Canadians: Goodale

    REGINA — Canada's minister for public safety says right-wing, white supremacists groups are an increasing concern and threat to Canadians.

    Right-Wing, White Supremacist Groups An Increasing Concern For Canadians: Goodale

    Woman's Complaint Leads To Sexual Assault Charge Against Calgary Priest

    Woman's Complaint Leads To Sexual Assault Charge Against Calgary Priest
    A Catholic priest in Alberta is being accused of sexually assaulting a woman in a church more than six years ago.    

    Woman's Complaint Leads To Sexual Assault Charge Against Calgary Priest

    'The Force Will Be With Him:' Star Wars Actor Honours N.L. Boy Who Had Cancer

    CONCEPTION BAY SOUTH, N.L. — A six-year-old boy who captured the attention of a province — and one of his Star Wars heroes — has passed away from cancer.

    'The Force Will Be With Him:' Star Wars Actor Honours N.L. Boy Who Had Cancer