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<strong>Fair</strong> <strong>warning</strong><br />

A true commitment to safety<br />

means speaking out about<br />

the dangers<br />

Tools for building safer workplaces<br />

WorkSafeMagazine.com • March / April 2013<br />

This issue: NEEDLE EASE | DEBRIS DOWNFALL | LOGGER LAUDED


2<br />

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BCIT protects.<br />

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health. Join BCIT’s many Health Sciences grads that are making an impact in areas<br />

including occupational health and safety, environmental health, and food safety.<br />

Explore our programs.<br />

bcit.ca/path/health<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

BCIT advocates.<br />

BCIT cares.<br />

It’s your career.<br />

Get it right.


20<br />

Features<br />

March / April Volume 13, Number 2<br />

8 ON THE COVER<br />

<strong>Fair</strong> <strong>warning</strong><br />

Research shows that workplaces committed to<br />

reporting minor incidents and close calls are better<br />

equipped to prevent the most serious of injuries.<br />

By Helena Bryan<br />

12 NUTS AND BOLTS<br />

Drop zone<br />

Careful planning and coordination are critical to<br />

prevent construction workers from getting hurt by<br />

falling debris.<br />

By Gord Woodward<br />

14 WORK SCIENCE<br />

Helping hand<br />

A new device for chemotherapy syringes is designed<br />

to ease the pain and pressure associated with<br />

manually delivering anti-cancer drugs.<br />

By Gail Johnson<br />

20 SAFETY SPOTLIGHT<br />

The fall guy<br />

B.C.’s award-winning “faller-whisperer” sets his<br />

sights on training today’s fallers to survive what<br />

remains a high-risk occupation.<br />

By Kathy Eccles<br />

22 TOOL BOX<br />

Dangerous load<br />

If your work involves spending time at a busy<br />

loading dock, then you’ll need to be<br />

prepared for ever-changing hazards.<br />

By Lynn Welburn<br />

Contents<br />

17<br />

Departments<br />

4 From the editor<br />

5 What’s wrong: you tell us<br />

17 WorkSafeBC update<br />

27 Penalties<br />

Centre pullouts<br />

Day of Mourning<br />

What’s wrong with this photo?<br />

Cover illustration by Graham Coulthard<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 3


4<br />

FROM THE EDITOR<br />

If you’ve ever witnessed a close call<br />

at work — one of those hair-raising<br />

incidents that nearly costs a life or<br />

a limb — chances are the event still haunts you. But what are<br />

the chances that near-miss was ever reported?<br />

Even in some of the safest workplaces, I’m guessing the<br />

answer would be “slim to none.”<br />

Recent research suggests the most serious workplace<br />

injuries arise from problems that often go unreported —<br />

mishaps that, luckily, caused little or no injury the first time<br />

around.<br />

Let’s change that. To prevent a likely disaster, we need<br />

people to speak up when something goes awry.<br />

But how do we get everyone from construction workers and<br />

nurses to truck drivers and teachers to come forward to raise<br />

a red flag? Encouraging people to report close calls requires<br />

an entire shift in culture.<br />

In the first of a two-part series about combatting B.C.’s<br />

serious occupational injury rate, we look at what makes a<br />

strong reporting culture — and we examine how there’s much<br />

more to it than paperwork. (See <strong>Fair</strong> <strong>warning</strong> on page 8.)<br />

It requires being alert and aware at all times. It involves<br />

analyzing and responding to seemingly minor incidents. It<br />

calls for clear, open lines of communication. It takes genuine<br />

effort on all fronts: workers, supervisors, managers, and<br />

employers all have a role to play.<br />

And, it means no pointing fingers. The blame game has no<br />

place in a worksite built on injury prevention.<br />

There’s a business case to be made for a strong reporting<br />

culture, of course, but more importantly, there’s less<br />

likelihood of life-threatening injuries.<br />

After all, we all want to go home at the end of the day with<br />

peace of mind, rather than tragically wishing we’d spoken<br />

our minds instead.<br />

Terence Little<br />

Editor-in-Chief<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF TERENCE LITTLE<br />

MANAGING EDITOR DANA TYE RALLY<br />

ASSOCIATE EDITORS LAINE DALBY<br />

CAROL-ANNE DOUCET<br />

ROBIN SHANTZ<br />

TANYA COLLEDGE<br />

GRAPHIC DESIGN GRAHAM COULTHARD<br />

PHOTOGRAPHY KHALID HAWE<br />

PHOTO SAFETY ADVISOR ANDREW LIM<br />

WORKSAFE MAGAZINE is published by the WorkSafeBC (Workers’ Compensation Board of<br />

B.C.) Communications department to educate workers and employers about injury and disease<br />

prevention, promote positive safety culture, and provide links to WorkSafeBC resources for<br />

safer workplaces.<br />

DISCLAIMER WorkSafeBC strives for accuracy; however, the information contained within<br />

WORKSAFE MAGAZINE does not take the place of professional occupational health and safety<br />

advice. WorkSafeBC does not warrant the accuracy of any of the information contained in this<br />

publication. WORKSAFE MAGAZINE and WorkSafeBC disclaim responsibility for any reader’s<br />

use of the published information and materials contained in this publication. WorkSafeBC<br />

does not warrant or make any representations concerning the accuracy, likely results,<br />

or reliability of the contents of the advertisements, claims made therein, or the products<br />

advertised in WORKSAFE MAGAZINE. WorkSafeBC does not warrant that any products<br />

advertised meet any required certification under any law or regulation, nor that any advertiser<br />

meets the certification requirements of any bodies governing the advertised activity.<br />

WORKSAFE MAGAZINE is published six times a year by WorkSafeBC. The yearly issues<br />

include January/February, March/April, May/June, July/August, September/October, and<br />

November/December. The magazine can be viewed online at WorkSafeMagazine.com.<br />

CONTACT THE MAGAZINE Email: Dana.TyeRally@worksafebc.com. Telephone: Editorial<br />

604 232-7194. Subscriptions 604 231-8690. Mailing address: WORKSAFE MAGAZINE, PO Box<br />

5350 Station Terminal, Vancouver, B.C. V6B 5L5. Courier: WorkSafeBC Communications, 6951<br />

Westminster Highway, Richmond, B.C. V7C 1C6.<br />

SUBSCRIPTIONS To start or stop a free subscription to WORKSAFE MAGAZINE, or to update<br />

mailing information, follow the “Subscribe” link on our website at WorkSafeMagazine.com. You<br />

can also email worksafemagazine@worksafebc.com or call 604 231-8690.<br />

EDITORIAL INQUIRIES/FEEDBACK If you’d like to comment on an article<br />

or make a suggestion, please email Dana.TyeRally@worksafebc.com.<br />

ADVERTISING For information about advertising your product or<br />

service in WORKSAFE MAGAZINE, please contact OnTrack Media at<br />

604 639-7763 or worksafebc@ontrackco.com.<br />

Diana Stirling<br />

COPYRIGHT The contents of this magazine are protected by<br />

OnTrack Media<br />

copyright and may be used for non-commercial purposes only. All other<br />

rights are reserved and commercial use is prohibited. To make any use<br />

of this material, you must first obtain written authorization from WorkSafeBC. Please email<br />

the details of your request to Dana.TyeRally@worksafebc.com. WorkSafeBC is a registered<br />

trademark of the Workers’ Compensation Board of B.C.<br />

Scan the MS tag with your<br />

smartphone to view:<br />

WorkSafeMagazine.com


What’s wrong: you tell us<br />

Merv has won<br />

an auto safety kit<br />

for his entry!<br />

Smoking while refueling is asking for<br />

trouble<br />

Editor, WorkSafe Magazine (Re: January/February issue,<br />

“What’s wrong with this photo?”)<br />

• The work area has not been cordoned off with tape, safety<br />

cones, signage, barriers, or <strong>warning</strong> lights of any sort. In this<br />

case, workers are exposed to vehicle traffic dangers and<br />

pedestrians are endangered. Caution signs should be<br />

deployed, <strong>warning</strong> of the dangers of slipping or the<br />

hazardous conditions created by high-pressure washing. Also,<br />

noisy, pressure-washing activities will make it difficult for<br />

these workers to hear approaching cars.<br />

• The worker is smoking while refueling. Bad idea. The worker<br />

should be using both hands to control that fuel jug, as well. If I<br />

were him, I would be refueling from the other side of the<br />

machine, just in case. Fuel can dribble onto hot machine parts<br />

from the area connecting the flexible nozzle to the fuel jug.<br />

• The stepladder needs to be in the locked position as indicated<br />

by the spreader bars. I’m very sure this aluminum ladder is<br />

rated for light, household-use only, making it unsuitable for<br />

the job. Also, a person cannot safely use a pressurized spray<br />

wand from a ladder, because the opposing hydraulic forces<br />

could throw him or her off the ladder.<br />

• Runners are inappropriate footwear for the slippery<br />

conditions workers have created. Pre-existing oil, grease, and<br />

other residues created by vehicular traffic do not mix well<br />

with water, and create an extremely slippery walking and<br />

working surface. If I were these workers’ supervisor, I would<br />

demand properly fitted and properly rated non-slip, steel-toed<br />

work boots for this job, preferably non-electrically conductive<br />

and of waterproof rubber construction.<br />

• Safety glasses and a face shield would certainly offer a<br />

necessary, dual-level of protection for these workers. The<br />

high-pressure water stream can propel loose material, such as<br />

rocks, dirt, and paint flecks, turning them into high-speed<br />

projectiles that are certain to cause serious eye and facial<br />

injuries.<br />

• The high-pressure hose appears to be wrapped around one<br />

worker’s leg and is also under or wrapped around the leg of<br />

the stepladder. The incoming water supply line should be<br />

redirected, with the machine moved out of the immediate<br />

work area, to prevent tripping. The pressure hose should not<br />

be coiled like that. It has created additional tripping and<br />

control hazards for both of these workers.<br />

• The portable, high-pressure washer is obviously running, as<br />

evidenced by the water spray coming out of the discharge<br />

nozzle. It should be shut off during refueling operations and<br />

allowed to cool down a bit. Where is the fire extinguisher? It<br />

should be close by, in the event of a refueling emergency.<br />

• Coveralls should be worn: preferably waterproof and of<br />

substantial construction. Why bring home all the<br />

contaminants that are certain to be generated by this job?<br />

Why expose your family to this needless risk? In addition,<br />

any exposed skin should be covered in case of accidental<br />

contact with the pressurized spray.<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 5


• Those overhead electrical junction boxes, the aluminum<br />

6<br />

ladder, and the water spray, taken in combination, are going<br />

to conspire to create an electrical emergency. There is a real<br />

potential for electrocution, given this lethal triple-whammy.<br />

• If this job has been contracted out, the contractor could be<br />

potentially liable for the outcome. If this worksite is under<br />

WorkSafeBC jurisdiction, then lawyers are sure to be kept<br />

busy sorting out the many violations of statute law, including<br />

a lack of proper supervision. Hopefully, no one is injured or<br />

killed in the interim. This job requires an immediate<br />

stop-work order.<br />

• If cleaning solvents are being mixed with the water, both of<br />

these workers should be wearing approved and appropriate<br />

respirators. Unfortunately, for the one worker, his beard<br />

precludes the use of many common types of respirators,<br />

because he will not be able to effect a proper seal between his<br />

face and the mask. His only option would be a full face mask,<br />

which he probably wouldn’t wear anyway, given all of his<br />

other misdemeanors.<br />

• Both of these workers should be wearing industrial-quality<br />

gloves to protect their hands. They should also be using<br />

hearing protection to protect against internal combustion<br />

engine noise, which undoubtedly will be magnified within the<br />

close confines of this concrete structure.<br />

• These men need to be wearing high-visibility vests in this<br />

potentially dangerous work area. The lighting is not good,<br />

and there are lots of blind corners and visually disorienting<br />

shadows, as well as dark areas. Coming in from the bright<br />

daylight into a darkened parking arcade results in a moment<br />

of temporary disorientation, if not partial blindness. These<br />

workers are sitting ducks as cars drive around sharp, blind<br />

corners without any <strong>warning</strong> of work in progress.<br />

• There should be no parked cars in the area immediately<br />

surrounding the worksite. If there is an emergency, the cars<br />

located nearby are only going to make matters a lot more<br />

complicated for everyone involved.<br />

• The pressure-washer location is unfortunate. Why would<br />

anyone locate it right in the middle of an unrestricted traffic<br />

drive-through area?<br />

• It is painfully obvious that these men have not been trained,<br />

nor are they being properly supervised. Are they new<br />

workers? Is it obvious that safe work procedures have not<br />

been put in place or implemented at this jobsite? Based on<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

the obvious hazards, has a risk assessment been done and<br />

appropriate controls put in place? WorkSafeBC inspectors are<br />

going to ask for evidence of appropriate training in the event<br />

of an accident, and my bet is they’re going to be disappointed.<br />

• While I’m sure it’s there, I see no evidence of a pressure<br />

gauge or pressure-relief device. Also, the spray wand<br />

should have some kind of a whip-check, where the incoming<br />

high-pressure supply line connects. An unguarded chain<br />

drive apparently exists under the main machine frame<br />

between the wheels.<br />

• In this kind of working environment, why not use an<br />

electric-powered spray washer or a power unit located outside<br />

the building, with lines leading up and into the working area?<br />

If this job is done on a regular basis, the investment would<br />

lead to both long- and short-term safety and health benefits.<br />

The advantages are obvious: toxic fumes are avoided,<br />

gasoline/diesel use is avoided, workplace clutter is reduced,<br />

and, the noise associated with an internal combustion engine<br />

is eliminated.<br />

• Unless the information is on the other side of the fuel<br />

container, I don’t see any evidence of required WHMIS<br />

(workplace hazardous materials information system)<br />

labelling.<br />

• Since these workers seem to enjoy working in close proximity<br />

to the smelly internal combustion engine driving their<br />

pressure-washer, ventilation may be an issue. Is this area<br />

being properly vented to protect against long-term exposure<br />

to the harmful exhaust gases released during the course of<br />

their shift?<br />

• The pressure-washing machine should be separated from the<br />

worker doing the pressure-washing by a greater distance,<br />

because two dangerous operations are happening in close<br />

proximity to each other: refueling and pressure-washing.<br />

• Because of the slipping and tripping hazards apparent on this<br />

job, as well as the real possibility of being struck by a vehicle,<br />

I would demand that both of these workers wear hard hats.<br />

These men desperately need proper supervision!<br />

Merv Hansen<br />

Millwright and joint occupational health and safety committee<br />

member<br />

Canfor<br />

Quesnel, B.C.


The act of lighting a cigarette is riskier<br />

Editor, WorkSafe Magazine (Re: January/February issue, “What’s wrong with this photo?”)<br />

With regard to the worker smoking while filling the gas tank of<br />

a pressure-washer; naturally, smoking in the workplace is a<br />

health hazard. There must be a half a dozen no-no’s in this<br />

photo. But there’s no risk of ignition here.<br />

The lit cigarette is simply not hot enough to ignite the gasoline<br />

fumes, even at an ideal 14-to-1 ratio. The act of lighting the<br />

cigarette would certainly provide a source, though: open flames<br />

Blowback is a big concern during power-washing<br />

Editor, WorkSafe Magazine (Re: January/February issue,<br />

“What’s wrong with this photo?”)<br />

• The hose is wrapped around the spraying worker’s ankle.<br />

• The workers are not wearing proper footwear.<br />

• The workers are not wearing safety glasses.<br />

• Neither worker is wearing ear protection.<br />

• The ladder is unsafe — it hasn’t been opened properly.<br />

• The hose is wrapped around the ladder legs — it’s unsafe.<br />

• Smoking is a fire and health hazard.<br />

• Filling gas with the engine running is a fire hazard.<br />

• They should be wearing waterproof, protective clothing.<br />

• They should move the hose from the spray area to eliminate<br />

unnecessary blowback.<br />

• No cones or barricades are in place to mark off a safe work<br />

area, away from vehicles and pedestrians.<br />

• The spraying worker should not blow the spray towards the<br />

other worker.<br />

• The pouring worker should wear gloves when handling fuel,<br />

in case of spillage.<br />

• The worker shouldn’t be laying anything on an engine while<br />

it’s running.<br />

• The worker should be wearing gloves to protect his hands.<br />

• The worker’s mask is not being worn — it’s hanging around<br />

his neck. Is it the correct type?<br />

and the sparks from flints are at a much higher temperature<br />

than the ash end of a lit cigarette.<br />

Peter Doherty<br />

Firefighter<br />

Campbell River Fire Rescue<br />

Campbell River, B.C.<br />

• Move the machine away from the spray.<br />

• One worker has no head protection — he needs a hard hat.<br />

• The other worker has improper head protection — he needs a<br />

hard hat.<br />

• The worker has no mask.<br />

• Operating a pressure-washer from this type of ladder could<br />

be unsafe, due to the push-back from the spray.<br />

• Loose clothing is a hazard.<br />

• Suds may be slippery — there is no <strong>warning</strong> or barricade for<br />

pedestrians.<br />

• One worker is reaching across the equipment. It’s better to<br />

fill from the opposite side, closer to the tank. It avoids<br />

spillage onto the muffler or engine.<br />

• One worker has bad posture for lifting fuel. He should move<br />

closer to the tank.<br />

• This worker should use two hands to hold the can.<br />

• The hose is a tripping hazard.<br />

Garry Geisler<br />

Project Manager<br />

Entek Engineering Ltd.<br />

Langley, B.C.<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 7


8<br />

on the cover<br />

<strong>Fair</strong> <strong>warning</strong><br />

March / / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

Sandra Oldfield, owner of<br />

Tinhorn Creek Vineyards in<br />

Oliver, B.C., has formally<br />

pledged to ensure her<br />

workers and supervisors<br />

report minor incidents<br />

and near-misses.<br />

Research shows that workplaces<br />

committed to reporting minor<br />

incidents and close calls are<br />

better equipped to prevent the<br />

most serious of injuries.


The following article is part one of a two-part<br />

series on combatting B.C.’s serious<br />

occupational injury rate. It examines the<br />

importance of a strong reporting culture in<br />

preventing “accidents waiting to happen.”<br />

By Helena Bryan<br />

In the early 1970s, Ray Roch was a university student working at<br />

a local mine in summertime. At the end of a long day, he, his<br />

buddies, and many of the full-time mine workers would head out<br />

on the highway to meet at the local bar. He and his friends would<br />

discuss one of the workers, who always put ‘pedal to the metal’ to<br />

get to the bar before everyone else. “He’d pass on double lines,<br />

drive on the shoulder, and go way over the speed limit to be the<br />

first one in the door,” Roch recalls.<br />

Roch, director of the Fire Inspection and Prevention Iniative<br />

(formerly WorkSafeBC director of emerging prevention issues),<br />

realizes this scenario provided the classic <strong>warning</strong> signs no<br />

workplace can afford to overlook. “The rest of us used to say, ‘one<br />

day he’s gonna kill himself, or he’s going to kill someone else.’”<br />

Sadly, Roch and his workmates were proven right. En route to the<br />

bar one night, the speeding worker crashed head-on with another<br />

driver. He survived, but a young, pregnant woman died, all in the<br />

rush for that first after-work drink. It’s a lesson that’s stayed with<br />

Roch to this day. And one he’s at great pains to communicate to<br />

employers and their workers — especially if it saves a life.<br />

“Close calls, minor incidents, and reckless behaviours are<br />

precursors to more serious events,” he says. “So if we see these<br />

<strong>warning</strong> signs, we need to report them.”<br />

Roch points to recent research suggesting the most serious<br />

workplace injuries arise from problems that often go unreported —<br />

near-misses or mishaps that don’t cause injury the first time<br />

around. And, in B.C., those injuries are on the rise (see What do we<br />

mean by “serious injuries?” on page 11). While the overall injury<br />

rate has either declined or remained steady, in the past four years,<br />

the serious injury rate has shown a slight increase. In an effort to<br />

combat that serious injury rate, Roch says employers need to train<br />

their employees to watch for the signs of dangers that could lead to<br />

serious injuries, and then encourage their employees to report them.<br />

“If you find yourself saying, ‘it’s only a matter of time before<br />

somebody gets hurt,’ it’s a strong indication that something needs<br />

to be done,” he says. “If not, someone is likely going to get hurt —<br />

seriously hurt.”<br />

While the incident from Roch’s past involved extreme behaviour, he<br />

says its lessons apply to worksites everywhere, including those that<br />

appear to have successful health and safety programs.<br />

The story behind the injury stats<br />

WorkSafeBC occupational safety officer Mark Phifer, who has<br />

recently conducted research into serious injury and fatality<br />

prevention, says the persistence of serious workplace injuries<br />

challenges a basic premise of health and safety management. “That<br />

premise assumes that if minor injuries are managed well, more<br />

serious incidents will also be averted,” he says.<br />

“Well, the numbers are telling us that there’s something we’re<br />

missing; they’re telling us that reducing serious injuries and<br />

fatalities requires a different focus in safety management.”<br />

This focus, Phifer says, begins with more effective reporting. While<br />

reporting is just one aspect of occupational health and safety, he<br />

says, it’s a starting point for preventing the serious injuries and<br />

fatalities that tear people’s lives apart.<br />

A strong reporting culture means more<br />

than paperwork<br />

The reporting Phifer is referring to goes well beyond filling out<br />

forms. “It goes right to mindset and culture,” he says. Typically, a<br />

number of smaller, less significant incidents precede a major injury<br />

or fatality. The workplaces with a good safety culture encourage<br />

their employees to report, track, and respond to these smaller<br />

incidents. “Strong reporting is about everyone being alert to those<br />

<strong>warning</strong> signs. It’s about getting workers to ask themselves, ‘what<br />

was the potential for this minor incident to be a major incident?’”<br />

Phifer points to a recent, real-life example: while employees in a<br />

shop were repairing a four-tonne screw auger conveyor, the stands<br />

used to support that conveyor collapsed. Thankfully, no one was<br />

hurt; a crane was used to lift the auger, and employees completed<br />

the repair without further incident. However, the absence of injury<br />

meant the collapse wasn’t reported or investigated, Phifer says.<br />

“This was a near-miss that could have been a serious incident, if<br />

someone happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. It<br />

was an indicator the worksite had certain hazards that weren’t<br />

properly identified and under control.”<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 9


Going beyond the blame game<br />

What should this employer have done instead? “When this kind of<br />

close call occurs, where clearly something more serious could have<br />

resulted,” Roch says, “the incident should be reported, analyzed,<br />

and acted on — without assigning blame.<br />

“For example, say an incident is reported in which an employee<br />

named Tom was repairing a piece of equipment without locking<br />

out. It shouldn’t stop at Tom. Management and supervisors should<br />

be asking, ‘why didn’t Tom lock out?’ and trying to determine<br />

management’s influence in Tom making that decision,” Roch says.<br />

“A sound reporting culture goes beyond the last act before an<br />

incident occurs. The company as a whole has contributed to that<br />

unsafe act. And, if all that happens is the worker is blamed, people<br />

will stop reporting.”<br />

Roch says that means employees must receive the support and<br />

resources they need to make those reports. And it means actively<br />

encouraging employees to be on the alert for any indications that<br />

suggest systems or processes are not working as smoothly as they<br />

ought to be.<br />

Progressive employers lead the charge<br />

Some industries are already taking matters into their own hands.<br />

A group of leaders in the B.C. manufacturing industry is working<br />

with the non-profit FIOSA-MIOSA Safety Alliance on a project<br />

expected to ramp up commitment to workplace health and safety<br />

at a senior level.<br />

So far, 46 CEOs have signed on to the Alliance’s new B.C. Safety<br />

Charter. The premise behind the charter is that effective health<br />

and safety management is critical to a company’s long-term<br />

success, profitability, and sustainability. And, part of that<br />

commitment to health and safety involves developing a strong<br />

reporting culture.<br />

Sandra Oldfield, who runs the Tinhorn Creek winery in B.C.’s<br />

Interior, is one of the charter’s inaugural signatories. Oldfield says<br />

10<br />

“If you find yourself saying,<br />

‘it’s only a matter of time<br />

before somebody gets hurt,’<br />

it’s a strong indication that<br />

something needs to be done.”<br />

—Ray Roch, director of the Fire<br />

Inspection and Prevention Initiative<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

her company’s commitment to reporting mishaps and near-misses<br />

is key to addressing health and safety oversights. Recently, in fact,<br />

she asked FIOSA-MIOSA to examine this issue as it conducted a<br />

“safety-gap analysis” on her operation.<br />

“I was confident we had a great health and safety program,” she<br />

says. “But we weren’t even close.” The 10-month analysis detected<br />

800 potential hazards in the vineyard and wine cellar, where<br />

employees face complex issues associated with pesticide handling<br />

and working in and around large tanks, heavy barrels, and<br />

confined spaces.<br />

“With the association’s help, we’ve since redone the program to the<br />

‘nth degree,’ with new, built-in systems for better reporting,” she<br />

says. “Now employees are expected to speak up about risky<br />

behaviours or near-misses.” What’s more, Oldfield is promising<br />

incentives for regular reporting. Recently, she offered a free bottle<br />

of wine to take home, for employees who catch her appearing to do<br />

anything unsafe — and who call her on it. “I want to hear about the<br />

hazards, no matter what, or who, is involved.”<br />

The company is reaping the rewards. “During the process, we’ve<br />

seen our premiums go down,” she says. “But the biggest savings<br />

are from rejigging our operations so that we’re more efficient.<br />

Looking at safety forces you to communicate, to get rid of overlaps,<br />

and to streamline. This revamped health and safety program is<br />

actually saving us tens of thousands of dollars.”<br />

Beyond lip service<br />

In order to reap the benefits of improved health and safety,<br />

however, Roch says supervisors and management teams need to<br />

demonstrate that they really care about safety — and that means<br />

welcoming employees who report problems and minor incidents on<br />

a day-to-day basis. “It means putting safety alongside production in<br />

terms of priorities. So, if I need 45 widgets by 4:30 p.m., and that’s<br />

a tall order, I have to ask myself, ‘how do my employees fulfill that<br />

order safely?’ There has to be an explicit reference to safety. I can’t<br />

just assume employees know I care about their safety; I have to


show I care by discussing how they can complete<br />

the task safely.”<br />

Roch’s group is developing a workbook for<br />

supervisors and management to help them do just<br />

that. “If we can change supervisors’ behaviour, they<br />

can then influence workers and the culture of safety<br />

at their workplace,” Roch says. He expects the<br />

workbook to be ready for distribution by this fall.<br />

In the meantime — as companies such as Tinhorn<br />

have learned — it’s worth asking the question, ‘is my<br />

company as safe as I think it is?’ If you don’t have a<br />

strong reporting culture, Roch says, the answer is,<br />

“no, it’s not.” And business case aside, there’s an<br />

even more compelling reason to make reporting a<br />

priority.<br />

“You don’t want to be one of those people whose<br />

‘aha’ moment comes too late — with the phone call<br />

informing you of the death of one of your<br />

employees. As an employer, that’s one report you<br />

never want to hear.”<br />

What do we mean by “serious injuries?”<br />

In 2008, WorkSafeBC developed a measure to track the province’s most<br />

serious workplace injuries. The serious injury rate was designed to monitor<br />

the effectiveness of WorkSafeBC’s prevention programs and strategies.<br />

According to that measure, serious injuries are those that result in 28 days or<br />

more of lost wages, or in health care costs equivalent to 28 days without<br />

wages. Ray Roch, director of the Fire Inspection and Prevention Initiative,<br />

puts it another way: “Serious injuries are life-altering or life-threatening, and<br />

they result in a serious medical diagnosis,” he says. “Amputations, spinal cord<br />

injuries, head injuries, third-degree burns, back strains, electric shocks, and<br />

similarly traumatic events are among those we deem most serious.”<br />

Recent WorkSafeBC statistics show that overexertion accounts for the<br />

highest percentage of serious injury claims, at 45 percent, followed by falls<br />

on the same level, at 14 percent, and falls from elevation, at 12 percent.<br />

Almost one in three claims is a serious injury, and serious injury claims<br />

account for 85 percent of all claim costs.<br />

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WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 11


NUTS AND BOLTS<br />

Construction sites in B.C. are proving famous physicist Sir<br />

Isaac Newton right hundreds of times a year. From an<br />

injury prevention perspective, that’s not a good thing.<br />

Just like Newton’s falling apple, objects such as hand tools and<br />

other construction equipment or building materials are all<br />

vulnerable to the laws of gravity. And when these items descend<br />

from high elevations, they all represent hazards to workers, not<br />

to mention others — including members of the public — who<br />

happen to be at or near the worksite.<br />

The risks go up when these materials land in congested areas.<br />

“Objects and materials fall from buildings all the time,” says Ron<br />

Morehouse, a WorkSafeBC occupational safety officer who deals<br />

full-time with high-rise and other large commercial construction<br />

sites in downtown Vancouver. “It’s a major safety issue, and a big<br />

concern.”<br />

12<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

Falling construction<br />

materials — particularly<br />

from commercial<br />

high-rises — pose a<br />

significant danger to<br />

workers and others<br />

down below.<br />

Drop zone<br />

Careful planning and<br />

coordination are critical<br />

to prevent construction<br />

workers from getting hurt<br />

by falling debris.<br />

By Gord Woodward<br />

Over the last five years, WorkSafeBC processed nearly 11,000<br />

time-loss claims under the heading, “struck by falling object.”<br />

More than 200 of these incidents were related to construction<br />

materials or other objects, and are likely associated with falling<br />

objects or debris.<br />

The consequences can be tragic, as the close calls so clearly<br />

demonstrate. Last October, several workers narrowly escaped<br />

death when a 90-kg pane of glass fell from a downtown<br />

Vancouver condo tower under construction. The window pane<br />

landed on the cab of a parked truck that was occupied, and<br />

bounced onto another vehicle, nearly striking two workers.<br />

Miraculously, no one was hurt. But the circumstances were far<br />

too close for comfort.<br />

To protect workers, employers should practice what WorkSafeBC<br />

construction industry manager Don Schouten calls a<br />

“three-pronged safety approach.”


First and foremost, develop and coordinate work procedures<br />

among all contractors involved for securing tools, materials,<br />

and equipment. The key is to prevent these items from falling off<br />

the building when workers are working at the perimeter. Plan<br />

where materials will be stacked and stored on site, so they are<br />

less likely to fall or get blown over.<br />

Second, ensure tools and equipment are secured by using<br />

tethered lanyards or rope — even, if possible, while these items<br />

are in use.<br />

And third, pay attention to debris. Keep the jobsite clean<br />

throughout the workday. Keep on top of housekeeping so the<br />

worksite is well-maintained, so nothing can be inadvertently<br />

kicked off the building.<br />

“Always plan for the worst-case scenario,” Schouten says.<br />

Planning and awareness prevent<br />

unwanted surprises<br />

“How much is it going to cost you if something goes wrong?”<br />

—Mike McKenna, executive director of the BC Construction Safety Association<br />

Jeff Lyth, a safety advisor with the BC Construction Safety<br />

Association (BCCSA), encourages contractors and employees to<br />

Continued on page 26<br />

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carefully plan and coordinate the work to prevent objects from<br />

falling, and to issue daily reminders about potential hazards.<br />

“The prime contractor needs to coordinate work duties, so one<br />

contractor’s workers don’t endanger another’s.”<br />

On high-rises, for example, iron workers erecting steel shouldn’t<br />

be working above a window glazier on a swing stage.<br />

Under Section 20.9 of the Occupational Health and Safety<br />

Regulation, <strong>warning</strong> signs should be prominently posted to<br />

indicate the risk of overhead work. And areas below need to be<br />

properly barricaded or guarded to prevent workers from entering<br />

the danger area.<br />

In addition, protective canopies must be installed, or adequate<br />

catch platforms or nets must be provided around the danger<br />

area to stop materials from falling into places accessible by<br />

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WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 13


14<br />

WORK SCIENCE<br />

Helping<br />

hand A<br />

Lisa Kondo has been working as an oncology nurse at the<br />

BC Cancer Agency for more than a decade. Her job<br />

requires technical knowledge as much as compassion.<br />

Because she administers potent medication to patients who feel<br />

anxious and scared, she needs to approach every case with care.<br />

Kondo has to be mindful of more than just people’s emotions.<br />

She needs to be gentle with people’s veins. Some of the<br />

chemotherapy drugs cause so much irritation they have to be<br />

given manually, delivered via a syringe at a steady, unrushed<br />

rate, instead of being administered by an automatic pump.<br />

“Some of the chemotherapy is very caustic to people’s veins, so it<br />

has to be given very slowly,” she explains.<br />

“You have to be really delicate. It can take close to an hour, sometimes.”<br />

For Kondo, that means operating a small piece of equipment<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

By Gail Johnson<br />

new device for chemotherapy<br />

syringes is designed to ease the pain<br />

and pressure associated with manually<br />

delivering anti-cancer drugs.<br />

over and over again in body positions that are less than ideal<br />

from an ergonomic standpoint. It’s a task she repeats day after<br />

day. She’s experienced the symptoms of repetitive strain injury<br />

as a result.<br />

“I’ve had to go for physiotherapy,” Kondo says.<br />

Repetitive strain injuries a<br />

concern for chemo nurses<br />

In fact, other oncology nurses report experiencing pain and<br />

discomfort. An ergonomic assessment conducted by a Provincial<br />

Health Services Authority (PHSA) ergonomist revealed that BC<br />

Cancer Agency nurses who administer chemotherapy drugs via<br />

large-volume syringes (20 cc. or greater) face a moderate-to-high<br />

risk of injury to the hand, wrist, forearm, and elbow. The risk of<br />

injury is a result of holding and pressing hard on the syringe, at


At left, BME biomedical engineer<br />

Dennis Schweers, education<br />

resource nurse Arlyn Heywood,<br />

and ergonomic advisor Rick Hall<br />

demonstrate a new device shown<br />

to ease hand and arm strain in<br />

administering chemotherapy drugs.<br />

WorkSafeBC’s Research Services<br />

provided funding to test the device.<br />

awkward angles, and for long periods.<br />

To overcome the problem, a team of B.C. researchers,<br />

inventors, and health care professionals joined forces to find a<br />

solution. With the support of WorkSafeBC, they developed an<br />

ergonomic syringe adaptor, intended to make chemotherapy<br />

nurses’ jobs easier and reduce their risk of injury.<br />

Rick Hall, PHSA ergonomic advisor and the project’s lead<br />

researcher, conducted ergonomic assessments on oncology<br />

nurses and sifted through injury reports to pinpoint the<br />

problem.<br />

“It became very obvious to me that the cause of the injuries was<br />

the result of awkward, sustained, hand-and-wrist postures, in<br />

combination with the prolonged grip-force they were using while<br />

administering chemotherapy medications,” Hall says. “Quite<br />

often, the nurses are using large-volume syringes. There’s always<br />

a risk that the needle inserted in the vein can come out and the<br />

chemotherapy drug could start to go into interstitial spaces<br />

(surrounding flesh) — and that can become very dangerous. The<br />

nurse has to be there to monitor that the needle is inserted in<br />

the vein and do a blood-return check by pulling back on the<br />

handle of the syringe or pinching off the saline line. And when<br />

they’re administering the drug, it has to be done at a constant<br />

rate or pressure.<br />

“They’re applying significant force against the plunger of the<br />

syringe and their fingers are outstretched for extended periods,”<br />

he says. “It’s not surprising they’re in pain and reporting<br />

injuries.”<br />

When working in awkward or fixed positions, tendons and<br />

nerves can become compressed. When muscles stay contracted<br />

for too long, blood flow can be affected. And doing repetitive<br />

movements often — and extensively — results in muscle and joint<br />

fatigue. Eventually, it takes more effort to perform the same<br />

task. With all that overuse and wear and tear on the same parts<br />

of the body, injuries can occur.<br />

Researchers devise solution to ease<br />

discomfort<br />

Hall was seeking a device that would allow the nurses to<br />

administer the drugs by using larger muscle groups of the back<br />

and shoulders, while avoiding inappropriate hand and wrist<br />

positions. He couldn’t find one, so he and others designed one.<br />

Working with Dennis Schweers — a biomedical engineering<br />

technologist at BC Children’s Hospital and BC Women’s Hospital<br />

& Health Centre — the team came up with a prototype. Next,<br />

they took it to oncology nurses for fine-tuning. From there, the<br />

technology development office at the BC Cancer Agency got on<br />

board, helping to fund patenting the product and find potential<br />

manufacturers. With the support of an Innovation at Work grant<br />

from WorkSafeBC’s research department, the Products and<br />

Process Applied Research Team at the British Columbia Institute<br />

of Technology further refined the adaptor.<br />

Next, the researchers recruited chemotherapy nurses to evaluate<br />

the adaptor in a mock setting. Sensors were used to determine<br />

hand-grip force and joint angles, and nurses gave feedback via a<br />

questionnaire about the adaptor’s usability, functionality,<br />

ergonomics, safety, hygiene, and aesthetics.<br />

The results were overwhelmingly positive. The adaptor was<br />

shown to substantially lower the risk of injury to the hand, wrist,<br />

and elbow by significantly reducing hand-grip force; to distribute<br />

that force over the entire hand and fingers rather than the two<br />

fingertips and thumb tip; and, to eliminate awkward<br />

hand-and-wrist postures.<br />

All 10 nurses who participated in the evaluation said they would<br />

use the adaptor if it was available to them, while eight of the 10<br />

who’d been having pain said they experienced less discomfort<br />

using the adaptor compared to a conventional syringe.<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 15


“ [Oncology nurses] are applying significant force against the plunger of the<br />

syringe and their fingers are outstretched for extended periods. It’s not<br />

surprising they’re in pain and reporting injuries.”<br />

“It was definitely easier to use than the regular syringe,” Kondo says.<br />

Arlyn Heywood, BC Cancer Agency education resource nurse, has<br />

also tried the adaptor and says its use is straightforward and<br />

comfortable.<br />

“It didn’t seem to take much effort at all to deliver the medication,”<br />

Heywood says. “It could make a big difference in terms of nurses’<br />

level of comfort.”<br />

Benefits of device could be far-reaching<br />

It’s not just oncology nurses who could benefit from an adaptor such<br />

as this one. So could pharmacists, who are required to prefill those<br />

syringes, and who face many of the same problems of pain and<br />

injury because of repetitive motions at awkward angles.<br />

Both Kondo and Heywood caution that their observations are based<br />

on the use of the adaptor in a mock setting and not on real people.<br />

However, the next step is clinical trials with actual patients, and the<br />

adaptor is poised for commercial production and distribution. The<br />

device won an Excellence in BC Healthcare Award last year from<br />

the Health Employers Association of BC: the 2012 Award of Merit<br />

for Workplace Health Innovation.<br />

16<br />

� Certificate of Recognition (COR)<br />

The program recognizes and rewards employers who<br />

implement health and safety management systems.<br />

Participate in the COR program, improve your overall safety<br />

performance, and your organization could be eligible to<br />

receive an incentive cheque from WorkSafeBC.<br />

Visit our website or contact us for more information on<br />

safety management systems and the COR program.<br />

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We can meet any training need, and<br />

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Knowledge<br />

sharing the<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

—Rick Hall, ergonomic advisor for the Provincial Health Services Authority<br />

Patrick Rebstein, associate director of the BC Cancer Agency’s<br />

technology development office, says it’s been exciting to see the<br />

concept of the adaptor come to fruition.<br />

“The PHSA’s goal is to be able to nurture and support this kind of<br />

innovation,” he says. “It’s been a team effort to identify a problem<br />

people on the frontlines are experiencing and then find a solution.<br />

We’ve worked together to move it forward. It’s been a thrill to see the<br />

adaptor be so effective. WorkSafeBC’s support was instrumental to<br />

this project.”<br />

Contact: Cathy Cook, Executive Director<br />

P: 778-278-3486 F: 778-278-0029<br />

E: ccook@bcmsa.ca www.bcmsa.ca<br />

WorkSafeBC director of Research Services Susan Hynes says the<br />

organization supports this kind of practical innovation, because of<br />

its effectiveness in reducing injury — a benefit to workers and<br />

employers alike. Furthermore, the methods used in this project<br />

could be applied to the development and evaluation of other<br />

ergonomic products in the health care field.<br />

“This project was truly innovative. It looked at something as familiar<br />

as a syringe in a new way, in order to minimize injuries,” Hynes says.<br />

“This kind of research is an example of how a relatively simple<br />

change can make a big difference to worker health and safety.”<br />

� Save the dates!<br />

The 2013 BC Municipal Occupational Health and Safety<br />

Conference will be held October 20-22, 2013, at the<br />

Victoria Conference Centre. This biennial conference<br />

provides a forum for all municipalities, school boards and<br />

other public sector organizations to exchange success<br />

strategies on health and safety issues through a series of<br />

presentations, workshops and panel discussions.<br />

� More information and resources are<br />

available on our website, or by calling<br />

or emailing Cathy Cook.


WorkSafeBC UPDATE<br />

Fresh<br />

thinking<br />

eases the<br />

load<br />

By Tanya Colledge<br />

Bad habits can be hard to break. And when it<br />

comes to the workplace, the bad habits we’re<br />

likely to ignore can lead to painful sprains and<br />

strains. Lifting tasks, for example, are something<br />

many workers don’t think twice about: they just do it<br />

— and often the wrong way.<br />

A recent contest, developed by WorkSafeBC<br />

ergonomists, encouraged employers to find innovative ways to<br />

ease the lifting load for their employees — and raised awareness<br />

about the simple ways they can prevent injury.<br />

“We need to change how people think,” says WorkSafeBC<br />

ergonomist Gina Vahlas. She describes lifting as one of the most<br />

common causes of musculoskeletal injuries (MSIs), often because<br />

people don’t look for an easier way to do the job. “We think that<br />

we need to lift, when in reality, there are better ways to get the<br />

job done. We just have to look at it with fresh eyes.”<br />

Last October’s WorkSafeBC Innovations contest, developed<br />

in conjunction with Occupational Ergonomics Month, asked<br />

employers to look for ergonomic solutions with fresh<br />

eyes — through either a physical change in the workplace or a<br />

The BC Cancer Agency’s Genome Sciences<br />

Centre is the winner of WorkSafeBC’s<br />

ergonomics contest for a crane-and-cart<br />

system to reduce injuries associated with<br />

lifting liquid nitrogen.<br />

change in the work process. Each contest submission was then<br />

subjected to professional scrutiny to ensure it wouldn’t go on to<br />

create new safety hazards.<br />

This year’s winner, Canada’s Michael Smith Genome Sciences<br />

Centre, developed a safer and easier way to work with<br />

liquid-nitrogen-filled transport containers.<br />

“Sometimes it takes a little head-scratching to change workflows<br />

and make improvements,” says Robin Coope, group leader for<br />

instrumentation at the centre.<br />

Coope’s team found a way to reduce the strain of handling heavy<br />

Cryoports — liquid-nitrogen-filled containers used to transport<br />

biological samples for extended journeys.<br />

Originally, staff faced the awkward task of extracting 30-kilogram<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 17


Cryoports out of 80-centimetre-high shipping containers.<br />

Workers would then pour the liquid nitrogen into the Cryoport,<br />

place it on a scale, and then deposit it back into the shipping<br />

container.<br />

The centre’s biospecimens group brought the problem to Coope,<br />

whose team has several engineers at the BC Cancer Agency’s<br />

prototyping facility in Vancouver. They developed a custom<br />

solution via a simple crane and cart-lifting mechanism. The crane<br />

lifts the Cryoports high enough to get them into and out of the<br />

shipping containers, loads and unloads the cart, and drops the<br />

containers on the scale for weighing. Workers strap the<br />

Cryoports into the cart and can then tip them in a controlled way<br />

while the cart’s brakes are on.<br />

“The key to getting a design that really works is to build<br />

prototypes that the users can actually test, then modify those<br />

18<br />

“The best testament is silence;<br />

we’ve had no complaints.”<br />

—Robin Coope, group leader for<br />

instrumentation at Canada’s Michael Smith<br />

Genome Sciences Centre<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

components, and test again — until the users are truly satisfied,”<br />

Coope says.<br />

Their clever, yet simple device earned the BC Cancer Agency the<br />

top prize, but Coope says, “The best testament is silence; we’ve<br />

had no complaints. The system simplifies the procedure and<br />

makes it safe — that’s what’s important.”<br />

The University of British Columbia’s (UBC) risk management<br />

services department was named runner-up in this year’s contest.<br />

This group improved a lifting task by making creative use of an<br />

existing piece of equipment.<br />

“The task was to move a 205-litre oil drum into a cargo container<br />

for storage,” says Bang Dang, technician for environmental<br />

services. “But without an access ramp, the driver had to unload<br />

the drum manually.”<br />

So, Dang placed a call to UBC ergonomist Abigail Overduin.<br />

Turns out, the best solution was right before their eyes: an eagle<br />

beak drum-lifter that had been purchased by the department<br />

years ago, but was no longer in use. “Now, the lifter and the<br />

forklift pick up the full drum and move it to the desired location,”<br />

Dang says. “There’s no manual lifting involved.”<br />

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Another runner-up, the mechanical engineering services group in<br />

UBC’s chemistry department, conquered the risks associated<br />

with a variety of repetitive lifting tasks. The department had<br />

initially looked into commercial products to help ease the<br />

required manual labour, but found them too limited and<br />

expensive. So, they designed their own: a lifting cart featuring<br />

360-degree swivel, retractable outriggers, and a large storage<br />

area.<br />

Overduin says it’s important to take a step back before coming<br />

up with solutions to ergonomic problems. “Look at tasks<br />

step-by-step, and involve the workers in solving the problem,” she<br />

says. “Sometimes these problems are complex. But often we can<br />

find simple solutions — such as changes in work layout or flow —<br />

to eliminate risks.”<br />

Overduin says teamwork was a critical component in each of the<br />

UBC contest submissions. “An integral part of UBC’s ergonomic<br />

By Gail Johnson<br />

If you’ve had a chance to play our “What’s wrong with this photo?”<br />

contest online, then you know how quick and easy it is to submit<br />

your entry via the web.<br />

Well, now you can get your hands on an<br />

even easier alternative: workers and<br />

employers on the go can now take part<br />

in the contest using their mobile devices<br />

— from tablets to smart phones, be they<br />

Apple or Android.<br />

The increased accessibility of this<br />

popular workplace health and safety<br />

game comes care of WorkSafeBC’s<br />

Product and Program Development<br />

team. WorkSafeBC technical editor<br />

Carolyn Stewart says the new technology reflects the increasing<br />

popularity of mobile devices.<br />

“More and more often, people are using tablets and smart phones to<br />

access WorkSafeBC resources, so we’re always looking for ways to<br />

make them mobile-friendly,” she says. “One way is by converting the<br />

online “What’s wrong with this photo?” feature to HTML5, so it can<br />

be used on any platform or device.”<br />

Currently, “What’s wrong with this photo?” appears in every print<br />

issue of WorkSafe Magazine, and is available as an interactive game<br />

health promotions program involves training employees,<br />

supervisors, and managers, not only in proper lifting techniques,<br />

but also in risk assessment and the development of solutions.<br />

“The WorkSafeBC ergonomics contest helped us raise awareness<br />

of musculoskeletal injury risks and how to address them. And it<br />

gave us a chance to celebrate the successes of those striving for<br />

safer workplaces. We look forward to participating again next<br />

year.”<br />

Interested in learning more ergonomically friendly tricks for your<br />

workplace? WorkSafeBC is currently gauging interest in a<br />

possible ErgoNews e-newsletter. If you’d like to receive such a<br />

publication via email, contact AskAnErgo@worksafebc.com.<br />

In the meantime, check out the video, Lifting in the Workplace,<br />

on WorkSafeBC.com, which comes with a discussion guide on<br />

how workers and employers can reduce the risk of lifting-related<br />

injuries in the workplace.<br />

Popular photo challenge goes mobile<br />

at www2.worksafebc.com/Publications/Multimedia/Photos.asp.<br />

Each contest features a staged image illustrating dangerous work<br />

habits. Readers are invited to find and describe the hazards, then<br />

send in their answers to win a prize or<br />

have them published in the magazine.<br />

The injury-and-disease-prevention<br />

images have resonated strongly with<br />

readers ever since they started<br />

appearing in the September/October<br />

2009 issue of the magaine. Every issue<br />

garners hundreds of responses, from<br />

workers, employers, and safety<br />

professionals across Canada and the<br />

United States, not to mention Africa,<br />

Australia, Latin America, Europe, and the Middle East.<br />

“The online ‘What’s wrong with this photo?’ challenge is an<br />

engaging, interactive feature that’s great for safety meetings,<br />

toolbox talks, and even new worker orientations,” Stewart says.<br />

“Taking the photo challenge raises awareness of workplace<br />

hazards, helps develop hazard-recognition skills, and reinforces a<br />

positive safety culture in the workplace.<br />

“If you can do all that and have fun doing it, why wouldn’t you?”<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 19


20<br />

Spotlight<br />

The fall guy<br />

B.C.’s award-winning “faller whisperer” sets<br />

his sights on training today’s fallers to survive<br />

what remains a high-risk occupation.<br />

When Bill Boardman talks about his 33-year career as a<br />

faller, there’s a lot of passion in his voice for a job he says<br />

he was born to do. And there’s anger, too. A<br />

third-generation faller, Boardman grew up in a logging camp in<br />

Knight Inlet owned by his dad and granddad. Though he wasn’t a<br />

faller, his great grandfather worked in the woods, and was killed by<br />

a falling tree. Boardman has grieved the loss of 19 fallers during his<br />

four decades in the woods — among them were two of his closest<br />

friends.<br />

He’s become an outspoken critic of any working conditions that put<br />

fallers at risk.<br />

So when Boardman received the Cary White Memorial Award for<br />

Lifetime Achievement from the B.C. Forest Safety Council last fall,<br />

he accepted the honour with a mix of pride and sadness. He<br />

acknowledges that much needs to be done to make the forests safer<br />

for fallers. But those who’ve worked alongside the man known as<br />

the “faller whisperer,” say it’s safety-driven professionals like<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

By Kathy Eccles<br />

Boardman who offer hope for future generations working in the<br />

woods.<br />

Peter Sprout, manager of falling programs for the council, has<br />

worked with Boardman on new faller and remedial training. “I’ve<br />

sent him out to work with guys identified as having poor work<br />

practices. The first day they’re resentful. Pretty soon they’re sitting<br />

on a stump, saying, ‘I get it.’ He knows how to get into their heads.”<br />

“He has a unique way of getting his point across, and a rare talent<br />

for being demanding and diplomatic at the same time,” he says.<br />

“The students I see are glued to him.”<br />

Boardman says he remembers the days when fallers were looked up<br />

to like kings: they had their own table in the cookhouse and a<br />

separate bunkhouse. The work was steady, and others accorded the<br />

same respect to experienced fallers they might an ancient cedar.<br />

But controversy — and tragedy — has dogged the industry since the<br />

early 2000s, when falling became the focal point for the dangers in<br />

B.C.’s forests.


Faller Bill Boardman (kneeling)<br />

leads a new faller training session<br />

with, from left: Shandy Campos,<br />

Evan Schwartz, Dale Orchard,<br />

Trevor Munn, and Jesurun Marks<br />

in June of last year, southwest of<br />

Campbell River, B.C.<br />

In 2005, the BC Coroners Service reported 45 forestry-related<br />

fatalities, seven of them fallers. WorkSafeBC and the council have<br />

since worked together to create a culture of safety in the forests. One<br />

means of embarking on that safety mission has been through the<br />

certification of fallers under the new BC Faller Training Standard.<br />

From Boardman’s perspective, once the standard was brought in,<br />

“everyone had to step up to the plate.” Initially, he saw resistance,<br />

but since then, he says, acceptance has grown. “Now, the reality is<br />

chain brakes are like seatbelts.”<br />

Veteran faller insists on planning and<br />

preparation<br />

Former faller Dave Gaskill knows firsthand what it’s like to benefit<br />

from working with Boardman, a bull bucker (faller and bucker<br />

supervisor) with “an unprecedented focus on safety” years before the<br />

introduction of training and certification standards for fallers.<br />

“When Bill came to see you, he’d look at the quality of your stumps,”<br />

says Gaskill, now an occupational safety officer for WorkSafeBC. “He<br />

would comment if he saw sloppy work. He wouldn’t tolerate it. I’ve<br />

seen him let guys go for bad work.”<br />

Boardman would walk the quarter, inspecting the falling face and<br />

looking for hazards, document them, and then formulate a plan.<br />

“Nobody did that back then,” Gaskill says. “He’d inspect your<br />

equipment. And he’d make sure you maintained two tree lengths<br />

from your partner.”<br />

During helicopter tree removals, Gaskill recalls Boardman being<br />

particularly diligent. “On steeper ground, a tree can slide for a<br />

kilometre and cause fatalities,” he explains. “The tree can come<br />

down the mountain like a freight train.” Boardman would walk the<br />

ground until he was 100 percent sure that a tree wasn’t going to<br />

come down from above on a faller. “I learned from watching him.”<br />

Trainees benefit from a voice of<br />

experience<br />

Dave Gaskill’s wife, Wendy, a former certification coordinator for the<br />

Council, was the one who nominated Boardman for the award. She<br />

calls him the “faller whisperer,” because of his knack for getting<br />

fallers to listen to him — no easy task, she says. “Fallers are a tough<br />

“ In this business, you don’t make<br />

mistakes. There’s no margin for error.”<br />

—veteran B.C. faller and forestry safety<br />

award-winner Bill Boardman<br />

breed. They’re independent-minded, and can be reactionary at<br />

times.”<br />

She often sent Boardman out to work with fallers on additional<br />

training after they were certified. “I would unleash Boardman on<br />

anyone — usually someone stuck on the ‘way-back-when days’ — who<br />

scored low on their evaluation due to inability or unwillingness to<br />

meet the standard. His goal was to work with the men to raise their<br />

mark high enough, so my ‘evil eye’ would look elsewhere.”<br />

She feels personally grateful for his uncompromising stance. “He<br />

was one of the fallers who broke in my husband back in the day. I<br />

thank him for providing the tools that kept Dave safe throughout his<br />

career.”<br />

An affinity for safety spans four decades<br />

Boardman had no such safety mentor when he began falling trees in<br />

1976. “I’ve seen the full spectrum from: ‘Here’s a chainsaw. Good<br />

luck. We hope to see you tonight’ to big companies willing to do<br />

in-house training.” In addition, he’s witnessed a lot of changes in the<br />

industry itself. “My granddad logged the valley floors. My dad logged<br />

the side hills. I’ve been put in a helicopter to the top to where my<br />

granddad said, ‘They’ll never log that wood up there.’” And now that<br />

they do, fallers face a new set of risks. “On steeper, tougher,<br />

inhospitable ground, the danger goes up.”<br />

Since 2009, Boardman has been providing faller safety training for<br />

the council. These days, he leaves nothing to chance when he’s<br />

working in the woods. “Maybe I’m a glass-half-empty kind of guy, but<br />

in every single situation, I ask, ‘What can go wrong here?’<br />

“In this business, you don’t make mistakes. You don’t get second<br />

chances. You get crushed, maimed, or killed. There’s no margin for<br />

error.” He cautions fallers to “leave their problems in the truck” and<br />

maintain a constant focus on the job. “It’s like playing chess: always<br />

stay five moves ahead so you can adjust the plan.”<br />

The faller whisperer turns 62 in May and is still falling and training<br />

others, still trying to make changes, one careful cut at a time. “I like<br />

taking these new guys and trying to implant in them safe work<br />

practices that will stay with them all their lives.”<br />

For information on B.C. faller training and certification, visit<br />

www.bcforestsafe.org/training/faller_certification.html.<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 21


TOOL BOX<br />

Dangerous load<br />

If your work involves spending time at a busy<br />

loading dock, then you’ll need to be prepared<br />

for ever-changing hazards.<br />

The commonplace loading dock presents an uncommon<br />

22<br />

degree of danger for workers in a wide range of<br />

industries throughout B.C.<br />

“Businesses of all types and sizes may have a shipping and<br />

receiving component, so loading docks are found all over the<br />

place,” says WorkSafeBC occupational safety officer Andrew<br />

Lim. “They’re all full of hazards that increase in the busiest<br />

times, during periods of chaos, when loading and unloading is<br />

happening.<br />

“Things can get quite hairy, then, and the risk of injury is higher.”<br />

Loading docks are found in hospitals, warehouses, commercial<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

By Lynn Welburn<br />

and industrial buildings, manufacturing plants, and offices.<br />

They’re always hectic and hard-to-predict environments, Lim<br />

says, with forklifts and workers moving products around, and<br />

then ramping up activity every time a vehicle arrives to load or<br />

unload.<br />

“No matter where a loading dock is — whether it’s part of a<br />

manufacturing plant or a warehouse — you’ll find common safety<br />

concerns,” Lim says.<br />

“Primarily, workers need to deal with traffic. You have people<br />

and vehicles both in the yards and inside the buildings. You can<br />

have visibility issues at night, and tonnes of heavy freight being


Sarwan Singh Bhango, a forklift operator for Simard Westlink in Richmond,<br />

B.C., loads his trailer only after locking out, securing the ramp, and relying<br />

on red-and-green-light sensors to confirm safe loading.<br />

moved around at all times. Plus, all of the<br />

work is being done as quickly as<br />

possible.”<br />

Workers should<br />

anticipate multiple<br />

hazards<br />

Loading dock risks range from repetitive<br />

stress injuries to major trauma — and<br />

even death — says WorkSafeBC<br />

occupational safety officer Sugavanam<br />

Prabhakaran. So, workers need to be<br />

vigilant in addressing both minor and<br />

major hazards if they want to stay safe<br />

and healthy.<br />

That means workers need to be trained to<br />

deal with heavy equipment, and ensure<br />

they work only on the equipment they’ve<br />

received training for, he says. They need<br />

to make sure vehicles that need loading<br />

and unloading are secure and immobile,<br />

keep the ground outside and the floor inside clear of obstructions<br />

or hazards, and have well-understood procedures so everyone<br />

knows what, when, where, and how to do their work.<br />

Among the more devastating injuries Prabhakaran has seen<br />

around loading docks are workers who were injured or crushed<br />

by falling freight. This is sometimes caused by load shifts in<br />

containers coming from overseas.<br />

“You can get 20-to-30-pound (9-to-14-kg) boxes falling. So,<br />

anytime you open the doors of a truck or container, it’s important<br />

to stand in a protected place,” he says. “Don’t ever try to stop a<br />

falling load, because you can be crushed.”<br />

“ No matter where a loading dock is — whether it’s<br />

part of a manufacturing plant or a warehouse —<br />

you’ll find common safety concerns.”<br />

—WorkSafeBC occupational safety officer Andrew Lim<br />

Ensure that a truck being loaded or unloaded has its tires<br />

properly chocked so the trailer doesn’t begin to creep away from<br />

the dock. That can lead to the ramp falling off, and sometimes<br />

the forklift and driver as well, he says.<br />

Other risks are less traumatic, but not without potentially<br />

long-term consequences.<br />

“If the ramp between the loading dock and the trailer that’s<br />

being unloaded is not adjusted properly, every time the forklift<br />

driver rolls over it, there will be a little bump,” Prabhakaran says.<br />

“It doesn’t seem like much: just a jump each time they pass over<br />

the ramp. But when you do that hundreds of times a day for<br />

years, it can cause serious back strain that’s debilitating and can<br />

lead to pain and lost time from work.”<br />

As well, Lim points out that forklift drivers aren’t the only ones<br />

who face risks on a loading dock. Sometimes their actions pose<br />

risks to other workers.<br />

“Employers need to set up a good system to keep pedestrians and<br />

workers using hand trucks out of the way of forklifts,” he says.<br />

“The onus is on the workers, who are working around equipment,<br />

to ensure they’re seen by the operator. That means wearing<br />

high-visibility vests and remembering that pedestrians don’t have<br />

the right-of-way in these locations.”<br />

Procedures and training protect dock<br />

workers<br />

Fourteen years ago, Sandra Kolberg worked for a warehouse and<br />

logistics company, driving forklifts and “throwing boxes” in a<br />

warehouse. Between 2005 and 2011, she worked as a supervisor<br />

for Damco (Maersk) Distribution Services Canada. She became<br />

the company’s health and safety manager in 2007, charged with<br />

improving policies and procedures for workplace safety — and<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 23


most specifically, loading dock safety.<br />

“I had done the work myself in the past, and I talked a lot to the<br />

workers to get their input and made sure their ideas were<br />

heard,” Kolberg says.<br />

“The company was already on side about making changes. And<br />

since the workers had a good chance to be heard, they tended to<br />

buy into the health and safety program,” she says. These<br />

changes included providing clear, written loading dock<br />

procedures, educating and training the workers in all the<br />

procedures, maintaining consistency in procedures, and<br />

designating lead hands on the floor who wore differently<br />

coloured vests.<br />

“People knew the lead hands were the go-to individuals for any<br />

questions or problems,” she says. “They were very key people with<br />

extra training and experience, and without them, safety would just<br />

go down the tubes.”<br />

The improvements, she says, significantly reduced worker injuries.<br />

Now a disability case manager for WorkSafeBC, Kolberg says the<br />

main advice she gave new loading dock workers is as follows:<br />

“Find an experienced buddy on the floor and learn from them.<br />

Ask them questions and express any doubts you have. Don’t use<br />

any equipment you haven’t been trained on, as you’ll put<br />

yourself and others at risk.”<br />

And for the more experienced workers, she would remind them<br />

they’re being watched by new and young workers, so they need<br />

to work as safely as possible to model good behaviour and help<br />

protect their co-workers from getting hurt.<br />

24<br />

Get on board with the Trucking Safety Council of BC<br />

Conference & AGM<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

“Workers need to remember that an injury on the job doesn’t<br />

just affect your job,” she says. “It can affect your whole life in<br />

many painful ways.”<br />

Stay grounded on the dock<br />

Health and Wellness: In it for the long haul<br />

JOIN US<br />

• Make sure the floor and ground are kept clear of all<br />

obstructions, including refuse, snow and ice, boxes and<br />

cartons. Keep traffic in the area to the minimum required to<br />

do the job.<br />

• Never operate equipment, such as forklifts or other material<br />

handling equipment, unless you’ve been trained in its safe<br />

and proper use.<br />

• Ensure that trailers and other vehicles have been<br />

immobilized, brakes are set, and tires are chocked to prevent<br />

vehicle movement. Also, make sure trailers are stabilized<br />

against tipping.<br />

• Reduce uneven surfaces between the loading area, dock<br />

plate, and trailer to prevent worker slips, trips, and falls, or<br />

musculoskeletal injuries among forklift operators who drive<br />

over such surfaces.<br />

• Speak out. If you have any concerns about falls or other<br />

hazards, tell your supervisor about them right away to keep<br />

everyone safe on the dock.<br />

—adapted from the following Health and Safety Ontario<br />

publications: www.healthandsafetyontario.ca/HSO/media/<br />

PSHSA/pdfS/Loading_Dock_Safety.pdf and www.labour.gov.<br />

on.ca/english/hs/pdf/poster_loading.pdf.<br />

Friday, April 5th, 2013<br />

at Northview Golf & Country Club, Surrey BC<br />

for a day of thought-provoking speakers, �rst-rate food, and networking. Hear from the world<br />

renowned expert in fatigue risk management, Pat Byrne “the Canucks’ sleep doctor.”<br />

Meet the SafetyDriven team and learn more about what we can do for your business.<br />

COR (Certificate of Recognition)<br />

Free, confidential advice<br />

Online and in-class training<br />

Posters, forms, templates and more<br />

TSCBC - Driving to improve safety - led by industry<br />

Register online at<br />

www.safetydriven.ca<br />

604-888-2242 | 1-877-414-8001 | info@safetydriven.ca


Continued from page 11<br />

<strong>Fair</strong> <strong>warning</strong><br />

Spring campaigns promote stronger reporting culture<br />

If you’re a seasoned worker, you might neglect to report<br />

near-misses and minor incidents at work, chalking them up<br />

to “dodging bullets.” So imagine how difficult it is to<br />

complain about potentially lethal workplace safety hazards<br />

when you’re young and inexperienced.<br />

It’s a concern that’s often uppermost in<br />

the mind of WorkSafeBC new and<br />

young worker specialist Robin Schooley,<br />

especially during campaigns designed<br />

to change that kind of overly relaxed<br />

thinking on the job. “In certain working<br />

environments, particularly when<br />

someone new to the job experiences a<br />

near-miss, it can be really tough to find<br />

the rationale for reporting or for<br />

speaking up,” she says.<br />

In May of this year, during the 2013 North American<br />

Occupational Safety and Health (NAOSH) Week (May 5–11)<br />

and BC Youth Week (May 1–7), efforts to enlighten that<br />

culture of “see but don’t say” will shift into high gear.<br />

Throughout each of the overlapping weeks, both<br />

experienced and young workers around the province will be<br />

reminded of the importance of speaking up, and the<br />

rationale for reporting, along with a host of other issues<br />

related to health and safety.<br />

“For young people on the job,” Schooley says, “the whole<br />

idea of rights and responsibilities is crucial. They need to<br />

understand they have a right to know about the hazards of<br />

their jobs and a responsibility to report concerns, as well as<br />

the right to refuse unsafe work. The concept of rights and<br />

responsibilities — of empowerment — is also a big part of<br />

Youth Week, which is organized by youth, for youth.”<br />

The result is a full week of interactive and fun safety-related<br />

activities, especially designed for a young audience. Since<br />

the inaugural event in 1995, Youth Week has grown to<br />

include more than 30 B.C. municipalities, and is now a<br />

worldwide event. By contrast, NAOSH Week is a national<br />

event targeting a broader range of workers of all ages. And,<br />

workers are bound to feel an even greater sense of<br />

connection, since B.C. is hosting the event this year. The<br />

national kick-off, which takes place May 6<br />

at Shipbuilder’s Square in North Vancouver,<br />

will include such keynote speakers as<br />

Walter Gretzky — father of The Great One<br />

and former injured worker — and a lifeboat<br />

rescue demonstration, care of Royal<br />

Canadian Marine Search and Rescue.<br />

At the same time, this year’s NAOSH Week<br />

theme reinforces the concept of sharing<br />

hazard information at work. Similar to BC<br />

Youth Week, NAOSH uses a community-based approach to<br />

raise awareness about workplace health and safety. And its<br />

theme, “Are you as safe as you think?” ties in nicely with the<br />

concept of increased worker vigilance around the need to<br />

report near-misses and minor incidents — along with the<br />

importance of hazard assessment.<br />

WorkSafeBC industry specialist and B.C. NAOSH Week<br />

committee member Kathy Tull says the theme encourages<br />

employers and workers to think about their work and the<br />

hazards they see around them. “The idea is not to wait for<br />

an injury to happen.”<br />

Tull says employers can take advantage of both events to<br />

promote a stronger health and safety culture. This means<br />

workplaces can consider “lunch and learn” safety sessions,<br />

a safety celebration barbecue, site inspections to look for<br />

hidden hazards, annual inspections of personal protective<br />

equipment (PPE), a personalized “What’s wrong with this<br />

photo?” contest, and larger-scale attendance at the national<br />

NOASH Week launch.<br />

For more information on NAOSH Week and BC Youth Week,<br />

go to WorkSafeBC.com.<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 25


Continued from page 13<br />

Drop zone<br />

If protective canopies are used, they must be designed to safely<br />

support all reasonable loads, in no case less than 2.4 kPa<br />

(50 pounds per square foot).<br />

Grant McMillan, president of the Council of Construction<br />

Associations, says falling debris is a significant concern for his<br />

association’s 2,200 members, about 70 percent of whom are<br />

trades’ firms. When incidents happen, they not only have the<br />

potential to hurt people, but often draw media coverage; “and,<br />

that paints all contractors with a pretty negative brush.”<br />

BCCSA executive director Mike McKenna cautions employers<br />

about the high cost of failing to plan ahead. Instead, they should<br />

use all necessary means to protect workers against the dangers of<br />

falling debris.<br />

Otherwise, he says, they could face lawsuits, repair bills, an<br />

increase in WorkSafeBC premiums, and worst of all, a devastating<br />

worker injury.<br />

“How much is it going to cost you — and ultimately your workers<br />

— if something goes wrong?”<br />

‘It’s the right thing to do’<br />

Safety for its own sake is a message echoed by Lou Metcalf,<br />

district health, safety and environment manager for PCL<br />

Constructors Westcoast Inc.<br />

The firm was the prime contractor for the massive B.C. Place roof<br />

replacement between 2010 and 2011. Given the challenges of<br />

having workers and cranes in close proximity, hundreds of metres<br />

in the air, PCL implemented a rigorous safety system even before<br />

the project began.<br />

26<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

The company’s initial assessment identified potential dangers,<br />

and then mapped out a grid system to get a sense of where<br />

workers would be during the various stages of construction.<br />

With that accomplished, PCL then launched a system requiring<br />

workers to get a permit for any site access. They met any<br />

violations with immediate disciplinary action.<br />

“We spent an inordinate amount of time policing the procedures,”<br />

Metcalf says. But it was worth it. “We still had a few minor<br />

near-misses with falling materials, despite our best efforts.<br />

However, with the measures we had in place, the probability of<br />

injury was very low.”<br />

Besides, he says, “we just know that taking those precautions<br />

was the right thing to do.”<br />

That safety-first approach spills over onto all of the company’s<br />

worksites, he says. Consequently, “we probably have fewer trips<br />

to the doctor than anybody in this business.”<br />

Other employers can follow that lead when it comes to dealing<br />

with the problem of falling construction debris. “It’s not a<br />

complex fix,” Schouten says. “But it does take the employer’s<br />

willingness to commit to planning and coordinating the work,<br />

and to strictly enforcing that plan among all contractors and<br />

workers on the worksite.”<br />

Schouten, who formerly worked in construction, says it’s<br />

important to also factor in the unexpected, including keeping an<br />

eye on weather forecasts, since gusts of wind can transform many<br />

building materials into deadly kites.<br />

Add to those safety steps a little due diligence, and preparation,<br />

and Schouten says employers have little<br />

to fear from Newton’s centuries-old<br />

discovery.<br />

“Like gravity, the rules for preventing<br />

falling debris are easy to understand,” he<br />

says. “For the most part, it’s about<br />

planning ahead and applying the rules of<br />

good housekeeping and safe storage and<br />

securing of materials. In other words:<br />

common sense.”


Penalties<br />

Administrative penalties are monetary<br />

fines imposed on employers for health<br />

and safety violations of the Workers<br />

Compensation Act and/or the<br />

Occupational Health and Safety<br />

Regulation. The penalties listed in this<br />

section show the date the penalty was<br />

imposed and the location where the<br />

violation occurred (not necessarily the<br />

business location). The registered<br />

business name is given, as well as any<br />

“doing business as” (DBA) name.<br />

The penalty amount is based on the<br />

nature of the violation, the employer’s<br />

compliance history, and the employer’s<br />

assessable payroll. Once a penalty is<br />

imposed, the employer has 90 days to<br />

appeal to the Review Division of<br />

WorkSafeBC. The Review Division may<br />

maintain, reduce, or withdraw the<br />

penalty; it may increase the penalty as<br />

well. Employers may then file an appeal<br />

within 30 days of the Review Division’s<br />

decision to the Workers’ Compensation<br />

Appeal Tribunal, an independent<br />

appeal body.<br />

The amounts shown here indicate the<br />

penalties imposed prior to appeal, and<br />

may not reflect the final penalty<br />

amount.<br />

For more information on when<br />

penalties are considered and how the<br />

penalty amount is calculated, visit our<br />

website at WorkSafeBC.com, then<br />

search for “Administrative penalties.”<br />

PRIMARY RESOURCES<br />

M.G. Logging Ent. Ltd.<br />

$3,250<br />

Prince George, November 30, 2012<br />

This firm was operating logging<br />

equipment on a single-lane public road.<br />

Since the road was too narrow for vehicles<br />

to pass each other, an effective traffic<br />

control system was required. The firm<br />

failed to implement such a system. The<br />

firm also failed to ensure that a qualified<br />

person was designated to supervise falling<br />

and bucking activities. Further, the firm<br />

allowed an unqualified worker to fall<br />

about 15 trees that were on the side of the<br />

road. The trees were felled in an unsafe<br />

manner.<br />

M & J Dhaliwal Green Acres Vegetable<br />

Farm Ltd./ Dhaliwal Green Acres<br />

$11,351.47<br />

Kamloops, November 14, 2012<br />

Three of this firm’s workers were<br />

seriously injured when a barn that was<br />

under construction at the firm’s farm<br />

collapsed. The workers were nailing<br />

lumber to the barn’s roof trusses at the<br />

time and fell about 7 m (23 ft.) to the<br />

concrete slab below them. The firm<br />

failed to ensure its workers’ safety by<br />

not ensuring that they used the required<br />

fall protection and by not providing them<br />

with the information, instruction, training,<br />

and supervision they needed to safely<br />

carry out construction work. Further, the<br />

firm knowingly provided WorkSafeBC<br />

with false information about the task its<br />

workers were performing immediately<br />

before the barn collapsed, and also<br />

instructed its workers to provide false<br />

information.<br />

Knighco Industries Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Powell River, October 10, 2012<br />

This firm failed to promptly assess<br />

numerous snags that posed a possible<br />

hazard to users of a forest service road.<br />

WorkSafeBC ordered the firm to assess<br />

the trees and then either declare them safe<br />

or remove them. The firm failed to do so<br />

within a reasonable time.<br />

MANUFACTURING<br />

Neucel Specialty Cellulose Ltd.<br />

$15,000<br />

Port Alice, October 22, 2012<br />

This firm failed to involve a worker<br />

representative when it investigated<br />

an incident in which its power boiler<br />

was extensively damaged and put at<br />

risk of structural failure. The incident<br />

had the potential to seriously injure a<br />

worker, so the participation of a worker<br />

representative, if reasonably available,<br />

was required. The firm also failed to<br />

prepare the required report on the incident<br />

investigation. The firm had previously<br />

received several WorkSafeBC orders<br />

related to other violations of the incident<br />

investigation requirements.<br />

CONSTRUCTION<br />

Super Strong Roofing Ltd.<br />

$8,099.03<br />

Vancouver, November 30, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal and three of its<br />

other workers were working without the<br />

required fall protection as they replaced<br />

the sloped roof of a house. The principal<br />

was on the roof directing the work from<br />

positions between 7.5 and 9 m (25 and<br />

30 ft) above grade. One of the other<br />

workers was on a steep section of roof,<br />

tearing off old shingles. He was about<br />

9 m (30 ft.) above grade. The other two<br />

workers were on top of a sloped dormer<br />

roof, at heights ranging from 7.5 to 9 m<br />

(25 to 30 ft.) above grade. The firm’s<br />

failure to ensure the use of fall protection<br />

was a repeated violation.<br />

Younger and Younger Roofing 2008<br />

Incorporated<br />

$2,500<br />

Langford, November 30, 2012<br />

This firm’s young worker was working<br />

without fall protection as he installed<br />

shingles on the sloped roof of a two-storey<br />

house that was under construction. The<br />

young worker was alone and working near<br />

the edge of the roof, where he was at high<br />

risk of falling about 5.5 m (18 ft.) to the<br />

rock, gravel, and construction debris on<br />

the ground below him. The firm failed to<br />

ensure its young worker used the required<br />

fall protection and failed to provide<br />

him with the instruction, training, and<br />

supervision needed to ensure that he could<br />

work safely at heights.<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 27


Navco Construction Corp.<br />

$5,861.15<br />

Tsawwassen, November 29, 2012<br />

This firm’s worker was working without<br />

the required fall protection on the sloped,<br />

unguarded roof of a two-storey house.<br />

The worker was working both near the<br />

edge of the roof and at its peak, which<br />

was about 7.5 m (25 ft.) above grade. The<br />

plastic sheeting and roofing materials that<br />

were on the roof, as well as other hazards,<br />

increased the worker’s risk of slipping<br />

or tripping. The concrete driveway and<br />

sidewalk below the worker increased his<br />

risk of serious injury in the event of a fall.<br />

The firm’s failure to ensure its worker<br />

used fall protection was a high-risk,<br />

repeated violation.<br />

BCS Contractors Ltd.<br />

$2,500 and $2,500<br />

Vancouver and Richmond,<br />

November 29, 2012<br />

This firm violated asbestos-related<br />

health and safety requirements on two<br />

separate occasions. In one case, after<br />

completing its asbestos removal work<br />

in a contained high-risk area, the firm<br />

dismantled the containment without first<br />

conducting air sampling to determine<br />

whether it was safe to do so. On a later<br />

date at a different house, the firm failed to<br />

maintain a containment where high-risk<br />

asbestos removal work was underway.<br />

The firm also failed to properly ventilate<br />

the containment area to ensure that<br />

contaminated air did not escape from it.<br />

Five Star International Development<br />

Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Surrey, November 29, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal and two of its other<br />

workers were applying sheeting to the<br />

sloped roof of a two-storey house without<br />

using the required fall protection. They<br />

were at risk of falling about 4.5 m (15 ft.)<br />

to grade. Also, one worker was working<br />

near the edge of the roof, which put him<br />

at increased risk of falling to grade. The<br />

hard-packed soil below the work area<br />

meant that all the workers were at high<br />

risk of serious injury in the event of a fall.<br />

The firm’s failure to ensure its workers<br />

used fall protection was a repeated<br />

violation.<br />

28<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

Satendra Prasad & Ronald Chandra /<br />

Island Asbestos Removal & Renovation<br />

$2,500<br />

Vancouver, November 28, 2012<br />

This firm allowed its worker to issue a<br />

clearance letter incorrectly stating that all<br />

asbestos-containing materials had been<br />

safely removed from a house scheduled<br />

for demolition. Asbestos-containing duct<br />

tape, vermiculite, and other materials<br />

remained inside the house when the<br />

letter was issued. This was a failure on<br />

the firm’s part to ensure that its worker<br />

complied with the Workers Compensation<br />

Act, which requires workers to take<br />

reasonable care to protect the health and<br />

safety of other workers who could be<br />

affected by their workplace actions or<br />

omissions.<br />

H. & G. Roofing & Sheet Metal Ltd.<br />

$5,432.60<br />

Chilliwack, November 28, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal and two of its other<br />

workers were working about 6 m (19 ft.)<br />

above grade, near the unguarded edge of a<br />

sloped roof. A fall protection plan was not<br />

available and the workers were not using<br />

fall protection gear. The firm’s failure to<br />

ensure its workers were protected from<br />

falling was a repeated violation.<br />

Zipp Construction Ltd.<br />

$4,123.25<br />

West Vancouver, November 23, 2012<br />

This firm’s young worker was working<br />

more than 7 m (24 ft.) above grade without<br />

using the required fall protection. He<br />

was on the roof of a house, near its edge.<br />

Fall protection gear was available and<br />

required, but the worker was not using it.<br />

The firm failed to ensure its worker used<br />

fall protection and failed to provide him<br />

with the information, instruction, training,<br />

and supervision needed to ensure his<br />

safety.<br />

SPS Roofing Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Burnaby, November 23, 2012<br />

Three of this firm’s workers were<br />

installing roofing tiles on the sloped<br />

roof of a two-storey house. The workers<br />

wore fall protection harnesses but were<br />

not attached to lifelines as they worked<br />

between 6 and 7 m (20 and 24 ft.) above<br />

grade. The firm’s failure to ensure that its<br />

workers used fall protection was a<br />

high-risk and repeated violation.<br />

BS Sanghera Roofing Ltd.<br />

$7,500<br />

Burnaby, November 21, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal was working about<br />

5.5 m (18 ft.) above grade on a sloped<br />

roof. Although he wore a fall protection<br />

harness, he was not connected to a lifeline<br />

and so was not protected from falling. The<br />

principal was working near the edge of the<br />

roof, and the construction materials and<br />

debris on the ground below increased his<br />

risk of injury in the event of a fall. This<br />

was a high-risk and repeated violation of<br />

the fall protection requirements.<br />

Chiman Homes Ltd.<br />

$3,250<br />

Surrey, November 21, 2012<br />

This firm’s worker was fatally injured<br />

when he fell about 4.5 m (15 ft.) from the<br />

second-storey balcony of a house under<br />

construction. He was working alone on<br />

an overnight shift as a night watchman at<br />

the time. The firm failed to ensure that<br />

the balcony had the required guardrails<br />

to protect workers from falling. The<br />

firm also failed to provide its worker<br />

with training on how to safely perform<br />

his security duties, failed to identify and<br />

minimize hazards at the worksite, and<br />

failed to ensure there was a system for<br />

regularly checking on the worker’s<br />

well-being.<br />

Safr Demo & Bobcat Services Ltd.<br />

$10,229.20<br />

Vancouver, November 19, 2012<br />

This firm violated numerous health<br />

and safety requirements while it was<br />

removing asbestos-containing materials<br />

from a commercial building. The firm’s<br />

violations included its failure to properly<br />

ventilate a containment area where<br />

high-risk removal work was underway.<br />

As a result of this failure, contaminated<br />

air might have escaped the containment<br />

and put workers at risk of exposure. The<br />

firm also failed to ensure that doorways<br />

next to the containment were secured so<br />

as to prevent the release of asbestos fibres<br />

into clean work areas. The firm’s failure<br />

to conduct the required daily inspection<br />

of the containment was evident from the<br />

presence of holes and an uncontrolled<br />

opening in the plastic sheeting used<br />

to contain the area. The holes and the<br />

opening made the containment ineffective.<br />

The firm also allowed its workers<br />

to remove asbestos-containing pipe


insulation by cutting it and capturing it<br />

with drop sheets. This was a failure to<br />

use handling procedures that prevent or<br />

minimize the release of airborne asbestos<br />

fibres. These, as well as other failures,<br />

demonstrated that the firm did not provide<br />

its workers with the instruction, training,<br />

and supervision needed to ensure their<br />

own safety and the safety of other workers<br />

at the workplace.<br />

G. B. Roofing Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Surrey, November 16, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal and two of its other<br />

workers were working about 5.5 m<br />

(18 ft.) above grade on a sloped roof<br />

without using the required fall protection.<br />

The firm’s failure to ensure its workers<br />

used fall protection was a repeated<br />

violation.<br />

Salvatore Manno / Trinity West<br />

Construction<br />

$2,606.38<br />

North Vancouver, November 15, 2012<br />

This firm’s worker was working about<br />

9 m (30 ft.) above grade on the roof of<br />

a building that was under construction.<br />

He was not protected by guardrails<br />

or personal fall protection gear. The<br />

worker was near the edge of the roof<br />

and the presence of a pneumatic air hose<br />

increased his risk of tripping and falling<br />

to the concrete slab below him. The firm’s<br />

failure to ensure its worker used the<br />

required fall protection was a repeated<br />

violation.<br />

0852244 B.C. Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Coquitlam, November 14, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal and three of its other<br />

workers were working about 6.5 m (22 ft.)<br />

above grade on a sloped roof. They were<br />

not protected by guardrails or personal<br />

fall protection gear. The concrete steps,<br />

hard ground, and construction debris<br />

below the workers increased their risk of<br />

serious injury in the event of a fall. The<br />

firm’s failure to ensure its workers used<br />

fall protection was a repeated violation.<br />

3 A Demolition Ltd.<br />

$1,000<br />

Richmond, November 13, 2012<br />

This firm allowed one of its workers to<br />

issue a clearance letter that inaccurately<br />

stated that all asbestos-containing<br />

materials had been safely removed from a<br />

house scheduled for demolition. The letter<br />

was inaccurate because various types of<br />

asbestos-containing materials remained<br />

inside the house. By allowing its worker<br />

to issue an inaccurate clearance letter,<br />

the firm failed to ensure the health and<br />

safety of its own workers and that of any<br />

other workers present where its work was<br />

carried out. This was a repeated violation.<br />

3 A Demolition Ltd.<br />

$5,000<br />

Burnaby, November 13, 2012<br />

This firm allowed one of its workers to<br />

post a clearance letter that inaccurately<br />

stated that all asbestos-containing<br />

materials had been safely removed from<br />

a house scheduled for demolition.<br />

The letter was inaccurate because<br />

asbestos-containing flooring remained<br />

inside the house. This was a failure on<br />

the firm’s part to ensure that its worker<br />

complied with the Workers Compensation<br />

Act and the Occupational Health and<br />

Safety Regulation. The firm also failed<br />

to provide its worker with the supervision<br />

needed to ensure his safety and the safety<br />

of other workers at the workplace.<br />

Marier Enterprises Inc.<br />

$4,239.48<br />

Coquitlam, November 6, 2012<br />

Three of this firm’s workers were working<br />

on sections of the roof of a three-storey<br />

condominium, at heights ranging from<br />

about 8 to 11 m (27 to 37 ft) above grade.<br />

The workers were not protected by<br />

guardrails or personal fall protection gear.<br />

One of the workers was on the small roof<br />

of a lower balcony. He had been using a<br />

propane torch, which increased his risk of<br />

tripping and falling, and his risk of injury<br />

in the event of a fall. The firm’s failure to<br />

ensure its workers used the required fall<br />

protection was a high-risk and repeated<br />

violation.<br />

S.S Westwood Holdings Ltd.<br />

$1,000<br />

Vancouver, October 30, 2012<br />

This firm was ordered to submit a written<br />

report on its investigation of an incident<br />

in which one of its workers was injured<br />

and required medical treatment. The firm<br />

failed to do so within a reasonable time.<br />

The firm’s worker was injured when he<br />

fell about 5.5 m (18 ft.) from the steep roof<br />

where he had been working without the<br />

required fall protection.<br />

RG Roofing Ltd.<br />

$15,000<br />

Richmond, October 26, 2012<br />

This firm failed, on two separate<br />

dates, to ensure that its workers used<br />

the required fall protection. In the first<br />

case, the firm’s principal and one of its<br />

other workers were between 5 and 6 m<br />

(17 and 21 ft.) above grade on the steeply<br />

sloped roof of a two-storey house. Due to<br />

the roof’s steepness, either personal fall<br />

protection or personnel safety nets were<br />

required, but were not in use. Several<br />

weeks later at a different worksite, two of<br />

the firm’s workers were working without<br />

fall protection on the edge of a sloped<br />

roof. The workers were about<br />

6 m (20 ft.) above grade. These were both<br />

high-risk violations of the fall protection<br />

requirements. In both cases, the firm<br />

also failed to provide its workers with the<br />

instruction, training, and supervision they<br />

needed to carry out their duties safely.<br />

RG Roofing Ltd.<br />

$15,000<br />

Burnaby, October 26, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal and two of its other<br />

workers were working between 6 and<br />

7.5 m (20 and 25 ft.) above grade on a<br />

sloped, unguarded roof. The firm failed to<br />

ensure its workers used the required fall<br />

protection and failed to provide a written<br />

fall protection plan for the worksite. It<br />

also failed to provide its workers with<br />

the instruction, training, and supervision<br />

needed to ensure their safety. These were<br />

all repeated violations.<br />

Jason Pley / Pley Roofing<br />

$2,500<br />

Port Alberni, October 18, 2012<br />

Three of this firm’s workers were working<br />

without the required fall protection on a<br />

sloped roof. The workers were near the<br />

roof’s edge, about 3.5 m (13 ft.) above<br />

grade. The firm failed to ensure its<br />

workers used fall protection.<br />

Whitewater Concrete Ltd.<br />

$66,452.22<br />

Richmond, October 11, 2012<br />

This firm’s tower crane contacted a 25 kV<br />

power line while the firm’s workers were<br />

positioning the crane to lift materials off<br />

a delivery truck. The firm failed to ensure<br />

that its crane and its workers stayed the<br />

minimum required distance away from the<br />

power line. The firm also failed to provide<br />

WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 29


its workers with the instruction, training,<br />

and supervision needed to ensure their<br />

safety.<br />

Hi-Class Framing Ltd.<br />

$3,258.45<br />

Coquitlam, October 9, 2012<br />

Two of this firm’s workers were working<br />

without the required fall protection on<br />

the roof of a new three-storey townhouse<br />

complex. The workers were about 9 m<br />

(30 ft.) above grade, near the edge of the<br />

sloped, unguarded roof. The construction<br />

debris and concrete retaining wall below<br />

the workers put them at increased risk<br />

of serious injury in the event of fall. The<br />

firm failed to ensure its workers used<br />

fall protection. It also failed to provide<br />

the instruction, training, and supervision<br />

needed to ensure its workers’ safety.<br />

James Byers / Roof Goat Roofing<br />

$3,250<br />

Parksville, October 5, 2012<br />

Three of this firm’s workers, including<br />

a supervisor, were working without the<br />

required fall protection on a steep roof.<br />

The workers were about 7.5 m (25 ft.)<br />

above grade. One worker wore a harness<br />

but was not connected to an anchor point,<br />

and so was not protected from falling.<br />

The other two workers were not wearing<br />

fall protection harnesses. The firm’s<br />

failure to ensure its workers used fall<br />

protection was a repeated violation.<br />

Kuldip Singh Brar / Canucks Framing<br />

$2,500<br />

Richmond, October 4, 2012<br />

WorkSafeBC found several safety<br />

violations when it inspected a worksite<br />

where four of this firm’s workers were<br />

helping to build a new two-storey house.<br />

For example, the firm failed to provide<br />

safe access to the worksite. All four<br />

workers had to walk on and step over<br />

scattered lumber in the front yard to get<br />

to the house. Two of the workers were<br />

working on the house’s steep roof. To get<br />

to their work area, they had to climb a<br />

stairway that lacked the required handrail<br />

and an unsafe job-built ladder that had<br />

missing infill pieces between its rungs.<br />

The firm failed to ensure that these<br />

workers used the required fall protection<br />

when they were working about 4 to 6 m<br />

(14 to 20 ft.) above grade on the roof.<br />

These workers were also using pneumatic<br />

nail guns, and the firm failed to ensure<br />

30<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

that they wore the required protective<br />

eye gear. One of the workers was allowed<br />

to stand on a platform that lacked the<br />

required guardrails. All the firm’s<br />

violations were repeated violations.<br />

B & W Framers Ltd.<br />

$5,000<br />

Vancouver, October 4, 2012<br />

This firm’s principal was working<br />

without the required fall protection while<br />

he was near the edge of a flat roof on a<br />

three-storey building. He was at risk of<br />

falling about 8.5 m (28 ft.) to the packed<br />

earth, construction debris, and protruding<br />

nails on the ground below. He was not<br />

protected by guardrails or any other form<br />

of fall protection. This was a repeated<br />

high-risk violation.<br />

Canadian Best Roofing Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Richmond, October 1, 2012<br />

Four of this firm’s workers were working<br />

without the required fall protection on a<br />

sloped roof at heights ranging from<br />

4 to 6 m (14 to 20 ft.) above grade. The<br />

roof had no guardrails and the workers<br />

were not using any other form of fall<br />

protection. The firm’s failure to ensure its<br />

workers used the required fall protection<br />

was a repeated violation.<br />

TRANSPORTATION &<br />

WAREHOUSING<br />

P M H Holdings Ltd.<br />

$2,500<br />

Richmond, October 16, 2012<br />

This firm failed to cooperate with a<br />

WorkSafeBC officer who was carrying<br />

out his duties. WorkSafeBC’s officer<br />

had ordered the firm to provide<br />

documents showing that the firm had<br />

fulfilled its responsibility to ensure that<br />

all asbestos-containing materials were<br />

safely removed from a house before the<br />

firm demolished it. The firm did not<br />

provide these documents.<br />

TRADE<br />

Country Lumber Ltd.<br />

$46,096.18<br />

Langley, October 18, 2012<br />

This firm’s worker was seriously injured<br />

when the forklift he was operating tipped<br />

over, pinning him underneath it. The<br />

worker had been operating the forklift<br />

near a shallow excavation where a section<br />

of asphalt was under repair. When he<br />

turned the forklift, it cut across a corner<br />

of the excavated area and tipped. The<br />

firm failed to provide its workers with<br />

the information, instruction, training,<br />

and supervision needed to ensure their<br />

safety. For example, the firm did not<br />

inform its workers about the timing of<br />

the asphalt repair work or clearly mark<br />

the excavation area. Also, the training of<br />

workers who operated forklifts was not<br />

current and did not meet the applicable<br />

standard. In addition, the firm’s<br />

supervisors were not informed about<br />

their health and safety responsibilities.<br />

The firm also failed to ensure that the<br />

forklift had a seatbelt and that its worker<br />

wore a seatbelt while operating the<br />

forklift.<br />

SERVICE SECTOR<br />

Connaught Motor Inns Ltd./<br />

Connaught Motor Inn<br />

$3,781.15<br />

Prince George, November 29, 2012<br />

WorkSafeBC identified multiple safety<br />

violations when it inspected this firm’s<br />

worksite. For example, the firm required<br />

its staff to enter guest rooms and other<br />

areas where they could have been<br />

exposed to asbestos, mould, and various<br />

other hazards. These hazards had been<br />

identified in an earlier inspection but the<br />

firm failed to address them promptly.<br />

This was a repeated failure on the<br />

firm’s part to provide and maintain a<br />

safe workplace. The firm also failed to<br />

inform its young and new workers of<br />

their rights and responsibilities when it<br />

oriented them and failed to keep records<br />

of worker orientations. These were<br />

repeated violations. Finally, the firm<br />

failed to develop and implement a written<br />

procedure for checking on the well-being<br />

of workers it required to work alone or<br />

in isolation, such as housekeepers and<br />

staff on overnight shifts. These were also<br />

repeated violations.


499692 B.C. Limited / Subway<br />

Sandwiches & Salads<br />

$6,213.78<br />

Prince George, October 30, 2012<br />

WorkSafeBC found several safety<br />

violations at this firm’s worksite. For<br />

example, the firm allowed one of its<br />

workers to work alone without being<br />

checked on or having to check in with<br />

anyone. This was a repeated violation,<br />

as was its failure to provide new workers<br />

with a health and safety orientation.<br />

The firm failed to hold monthly safety<br />

meetings and maintain adequate first<br />

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WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 31


32<br />

March / April 2013 WorkSafe Magazine<br />

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WorkSafe Magazine March / April 2013 33


Your co-worker has a<br />

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* After 4 minutes without oxygen, brain cells will begin to die.

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