Reporting
Every Incident: ‘Person’ vs. ‘Worker’ in the OHSA
Person vs. Worker
The Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA) is set up to outline the
rights and duties of all parties in the workplaces. Typically when one thinks
of “workplace parties” the employer, managers/supervisors, and employees come
to mind. As such, most employers
consider the OHSA to protect only workers of the workplace, but based on some
of the specific wording in the act this may not be the case.
In Ontario, under subsection
51 (1) of the OHSA, the Ministry of Labour (MOL) must be notified immediately
after the occurrence of a death or injury at the workplace. The belief has been that this only relates to
deaths or injuries of a person employed by the workplace, but a recent OLRB
case involving Blue Mountain resort reveals that in fact is not the case.
In December of 2007, an
unsupervised guest at the Blue Mountain Resort in Ontario drowned in the indoor
swimming pool. When the incident occurred, no workers were present in the pool
area. Blue Mountain decided not to
report the fatality to the Ministry of Labour since the incident did not
involve a worker. Four months later a
Ministry of Labour inspector visited the resort to conduct workplace compliance
audit, and soon found out about the drowning.
As a result Blue Mountain was issued an order under Ontario’s subsection
51 (1) of the OHSA which states that:
Where
a person is killed or
critically injured from any cause at a workplace, the constructor, if any, and
the employer shall notify an inspector, and the committee, health and safety
representative and trade union, if any, immediately of the occurrence by
telephone or other direct means...
Based
on the literal wording of the act, Blue Mountain was given an order since they
failed to notify an inspector of the death of a person. Blue Mountain appealed the order to the
Ontario Labour Relations Board (OLRB) and further sought judicial review, but
both the board and the Court upheld the order.
Subsection
51 (1) is not the only instance of the use of the word “person” in the
OHSA. While the term person is not
defined in the act, “worker” is defined as “a person who performs work or
supplies services for monetary compensation...” therefore the OLRB held that
the term “person” was more expansive than “worker” and that the OHSA wouldn’t
have used the word “person” if they only meant “worker.” The main reason for why
the MOL requires non-worker fatalities and injuries to be reported is that the
workplace hazards that injure non-workers may also endanger workers.
What
does this mean for Employers?
While
the responsibility under the OHSA to report deaths or critical injuries hasn’t
changed or been revised, the outcome of the Blue Mountain case has broadened
the understanding of OHSA’s definitions.
This new understanding runs the risk of turning almost any place into a
workplace, and any injury or fatality as an incident to report. What is and isn’t a reportable injury to the
MOL under the OHSA? Currently the answer
really can only be left to, “it depends on the circumstances.”
Under
the Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations Section 15.3 it states: Where an
employee becomes aware of an accident or other
occurrence arising in the course of or in connection with the employee’s work
that has caused or is likely to cause injury to that employee or to any other
person, the employee shall, without delay, report the accident
or other occurrence to his employer, orally or in writing.
Manitoba’s
legislation is very close to Ontario’s in that “Persons” are referred to in the
act and the Division must be called should a critical injury or death
occur. PEI is in a similar
position. Although both provinces do not
have case law similar to Blue Mountain that they were aware of, the Blue Mountain Case will likely
set a precedent in other jurisdictions.
In speaking with Worksafe BC, they
indicated their legislation is specific to a worker - Section
172 of the Workers Compensation Act ("Act") states:
172 (1) An employer must immediately
notify the Board of the occurrence of any accident that (a) resulted in serious
injury to or the death of a worker….
While
some provinces make reference to person and some do not; what all employers across Canada need to do
is take every precaution when dealing with any type of workplace accident; this
should also include when a non-worker accident occurs. Proper accident and incident reporting
procedures should be developed and in place complete with employer, employee,
manager/supervisor, and Health and Safety representative responsibilities in
order to ensure Health and Safety Legislation and Provincial Governance Compliance
is met.
Lynne
Bard is President and Senior Consultant of Beyond Rewards Inc, a preeminent
human resources, risk management, safety, health and training consulting firm
based in Guelph, Ontario. Contact Lynne
at info@beyondrewards.ca
Lynne Bard, BA (Honours), C.H.R.P., CES
Human Resources, Safety & Risk Management Experts
Taking the Complexity out of Compliance
President
Beyond Rewards Inc.
Phone: 519-821-7440
Cell: 519-830-7480
email: lbard@beyondrewards.ca