Friday, December 19, 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

Supreme Court will hear Quebec comedian's case

Supreme Court will hear Quebec comedian's case
The Supreme Court of Canada has decided to hear the appeal of Quebec comedian Mike Ward in a human-rights case that touches on the limits of artistic expression and the role of the country's human rights tribunals.

Supreme Court will hear Quebec comedian's case

N.B. woman found after almost two weeks missing

N.B. woman found after almost two weeks missing
A New Brunswick woman says she was able to survive in woods in the northeast of the province for nearly two weeks by drinking rainwater from puddles and eating wild berries.

N.B. woman found after almost two weeks missing

Airports begin screening for temperatures

Airports begin screening for temperatures
Four major Canadian airports will begin taking passengers' temperatures starting today as part of the effort to curb the spread of COVID-19.

Airports begin screening for temperatures

Few regrets for Toronto's 1st Black police chief

Few regrets for Toronto's 1st Black police chief
Ask the outgoing head of the country's largest municipal police force about defunding or cuts to its $1-billion budget, and the response reflects typical disdain for what he views as sloganeering in response to complex problems.

Few regrets for Toronto's 1st Black police chief

Judge in Quebec hijab case to offer apology

Judge in Quebec hijab case to offer apology
A Quebec judge who refused to allow a Muslim woman to appear in court wearing a hijab in 2015 will apologize.

Judge in Quebec hijab case to offer apology

Shrubsall sentenced for fleeing to Canada

Shrubsall sentenced for fleeing to Canada
A New York state judge has sentenced a man who committed violent sexual crimes in Nova Scotia to between two and six years of additional jail time for absconding from justice and fleeing to Canada in 1996.

Shrubsall sentenced for fleeing to Canada