Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

WorkSafeBC To Appeal Decision Favouring Mike Singh's Asbestos-Removal Company

The Canadian Press, 03 Mar, 2016 11:52 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's Workers' Compensation Board is appealing a B.C. Supreme Court decision that threw out allegations that an asbestos-removal contractor and his son disobeyed a court order to comply with safety laws.
     
    WorkSafeBC says it will ask the province's appeal court to reconsider the judgment, which union leaders say threatens to undermine the province's entire regulatory regime.
     
    Seattle Environmental Consulting Ltd., owner Mike Singh and his son Shawn Singh face hundreds of workplace violations dating back to 2007, with fines exceeding $200,000.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice George Macintosh dismissed a court order against the pair last week, saying the Workers' Compensation Act is too difficult to understand.
     
    Provincial labour leaders immediately condemned the judgment, saying it risked neutering B.C.'s workplace-safety regulations by concluding that if the law is too complex it shouldn't be followed.
     
    B.C. Federation of Labour head Irene Lanzinger said companies with expertise in a given field have a responsibility to know the laws that govern their work.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada

    Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada
    A Cornwall, Ont., man and three foreign nationals have been arrested in what border officials say was an attempt to smuggle people from the United States into Canada.

    Ontario Man, 3 Foreign Nationals Arrested In Attempted Smuggling Into Canada

    Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast

    Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast
    An analysis by one of Canada's biggest banks says the federal government is on track to run $150 billion in budgetary deficits over the next five years.

    Feds Headed For $150 Billion In Deficits Over Next 5 Years: TD Bank Forecast

    Justin Trudeau Hits The Slopes At Whistler Over Weekend, Praises Guards' Ski Skills

    Justin Trudeau Hits The Slopes At Whistler Over Weekend, Praises Guards' Ski Skills
    The prime minister took some time out of running the country over the weekend to shred some powder with his family in Whistler, B.C.

    Justin Trudeau Hits The Slopes At Whistler Over Weekend, Praises Guards' Ski Skills

    Halifax Spoofed For Asking Dog Owners To Keep Pets Quiet In Off-Leash Park

    Halifax Spoofed For Asking Dog Owners To Keep Pets Quiet In Off-Leash Park
    The municipality recently erected a sign at the off-leash area of Shubie Park asking pet owners to "control your dog's barking" or take them elsewhere.

    Halifax Spoofed For Asking Dog Owners To Keep Pets Quiet In Off-Leash Park

    Overcrowding Blamed As Females To Be Held At Men's Penitentiary In Newfoundland

    Overcrowding Blamed As Females To Be Held At Men's Penitentiary In Newfoundland
      Justice Minister Andrew Parsons says it's a temporary move to deal with a "sharp increase" of inmates at the province's only correctional centre for women in Clarenville.

    Overcrowding Blamed As Females To Be Held At Men's Penitentiary In Newfoundland

    Letter To Justin Trudeau, Premiers: Scientists Tell Politicians To Rethink Pipelines

    Letter To Justin Trudeau, Premiers: Scientists Tell Politicians To Rethink Pipelines
    In an open letter to the politicians, members of Sustainable Canada Dialogues question pumping billions into new pipelines and other oil and gas projects.

    Letter To Justin Trudeau, Premiers: Scientists Tell Politicians To Rethink Pipelines