Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Amend B.C. Workers Compensation Act: review

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Aug, 2020 10:22 PM
  • Amend B.C. Workers Compensation Act: review

A review of services offered to injured workers in British Columbia makes more than 100 recommendations to improve communication, care and individual services at the Workers' Compensation Board.

Labour Minister Harry Bains released a report Wednesday by retired labour lawyer Janet Patterson, who was commissioned by the government to review the workers' compensation system and make recommendations for improvements.

Patterson's 517-page review calls for an organizational shift to a worker-centric delivery system that treats all injured workers with dignity.

Her report, New Directions: Report of the Workers' Compensation Board Review, 2019, calls on the government to amend the Workers Compensation Act to make a cultural shift back to supporting all injured workers as an organizational goal.

Bains says Patterson consulted widely and heard from more than 2,000 people and organizations.

He says the government is making the report public while it considers Patterson's recommendations.

"There are over 100 recommendations, of which about 60 are for operational and process changes within WorkSafeBC," Bains says in a news release. "It contains substantial information and recommendations that will take some significant time to carefully review."

Photo courtesy of Instagram.

MORE National ARTICLES

Champagne Talks Global Covid-19 Security With G7 Foreign Ministers Over Video

Champagne Talks Global Covid-19 Security With G7 Foreign Ministers Over Video
OTTAWA - Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne is holding a video meeting with his G7 counterparts today to discuss security issues around the globe related to the COVID-19 crisis.

Champagne Talks Global Covid-19 Security With G7 Foreign Ministers Over Video

Pandemic-Related Supports Coming For Media And Journalism, Trudeau Says

OTTAWA - The federal government is planning to provide financial support to media organizations to keep journalists working and reporting on the COVID-19 crisis.    

Pandemic-Related Supports Coming For Media And Journalism, Trudeau Says

Senate Approves Emergency Bill To Respond To Covid-19 Crisis

Senate Approves Emergency Bill To Respond To Covid-19 Crisis
OTTAWA - An emergency federal bill to inject billions of dollars of aid into the Canadian economy for workers, families and businesses hit hard by COVID-19 has passed the Senate and now awaits royal assent.    

Senate Approves Emergency Bill To Respond To Covid-19 Crisis

Newfoundland Woman Arrested For Refusing To Self Isolate After Talking To Police

Newfoundland Woman Arrested For Refusing To Self Isolate After Talking To Police
ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - Police in western Newfoundland say a woman arrested for refusing to stay at home after she returned from a trip outside the province is expected to make a court appearance today.

Newfoundland Woman Arrested For Refusing To Self Isolate After Talking To Police

Patients Bumped By COVID Face Anxiety, As Health System Searches For Alternatives

Patients Bumped By COVID Face Anxiety, As Health System Searches For Alternatives
HALIFAX - For Canadians awaiting life-changing operations, the novel coronavirus is creating deepening distress as cancellations and delays roll through the public health system.    

Patients Bumped By COVID Face Anxiety, As Health System Searches For Alternatives

Testing Backlog Linked To Shortage Of Chemicals Needed For Covid-19 Test

Testing Backlog Linked To Shortage Of Chemicals Needed For Covid-19 Test
Regions across Canada are ramping up efforts to identify people with COVID-19 but some labs are facing a backlog due to diminishing supplies of essential chemicals needed for tests.    

Testing Backlog Linked To Shortage Of Chemicals Needed For Covid-19 Test