|
Working Alone Committee Members Issue "Minority
Report"
Labour Representatives Feel New Provisions Fall Short
By Jason Foster, AFL Staff
Labour members of the Task Force that recommended new
provisions for working alone regulations released a "minority report"
today stating the provisions "fall short" in protecting workers. The
"Minority Report" comes in response to the official implementation of
new working alone regulations.
"The Alberta government missed an opportunity
today," says Audrey Cormack, AFL President. "The new regulations fall
far short of what is needed to really protect workers who have to work
alone."
The Minority Report comes from a group of 6 Labour
representatives on the General Safety Regulation Task Force, which is the body
charged with recommending new regulations for working alone. The Task Force
recommendations included a mandatory assessment of the hazards and some form of
effective communication system.
"The labour representatives attempted to include
stronger provisions, such as permitting a worker to refuse working alone that
may put their safety at substantial risk, but were shot down by the employer
side of the Task Force," says Jason Foster, who represented the AFL on the
Task Force.
"Banning working alone was never in the Minister’s
plan," says Foster. Foster indicates the Minister communicated to a number
of parties that a ban was never in the works. This message affected the Task
Force’s deliberations.
The labour representatives decided to support the six
sections as a first step measure. "It was the best compromise possible
given the strong opposition from employers and the government," says
Foster. "We want the public to know that the provisions do not go far
enough."
The Minority Report calls for additional steps to be taken,
including:
Making the elimination of working alone (scheduling more
than one worker) the first consideration before other hazard controls
The Minister be given the discretion to designate certain
jobs "high hazard" and ban working alone in those jobs
Permitting workers to refuse to work alone if it places
their safety at "substantial risk"
Define "effective communication system" as
having both an emergency call for the employee and a regular check-in by
someone who can get help
"Preventing working alone should be the first level of
defense," says Cormack. "With this government, it barely makes the
radar screen."
The labour representatives will continue to sit on the Task
Force and try to make improvements to the health and safety regulations where
they can.
"What the results of the working alone process show is that the public
needs to put greater pressure on the government to make them give higher
priority to worker health and safety."
|