Saturday, April 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Anti-harassment program for B.C. port workers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Feb, 2021 08:22 PM
  • Anti-harassment program for B.C. port workers

A violence and harassment prevention training program aims to shift what has traditionally been the white, male-dominated culture of British Columbia's waterfront workplaces.

Federal Labour Minister Filomena Tassi says the BC Maritime Employers Association, International Longshore and Warehouse Union and Ending Violence Association of BC have created a program to benefit 10,000 employees in ports along the B.C. coast.

A statement from Employment and Social Development Canada says the program is backed by a portion of $3.9 million in federal funding and provides training and education to support safer, more respectful workplaces, including for LGBTQ and Indigenous communities.

Rob Ashton, president of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union, says the first-of-its-kind initiative underway on B.C.'s waterfront is not designed to "weaponize" anti-harassment training through discipline, although the program will have measures to encourage compliance.

Instead, he says it is based on the "Be More than a Bystander" campaign developed by the Ending Violence Association and will "start the healing" by changing a culture that Ashton says divided waterfront work along racial lines as far back as the late 1800s.

Tracy Porteous with the Ending Violence Association of BC says her group's bystander campaign is a good fit for waterfront workers because it will add the "voices and committed interventions by men" to those of women and minorities already speaking up against workplace violence and harassment.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police say man suffers injuries during a robbery in Surrey

Police say man suffers injuries during a robbery in Surrey
The responding officer pulled into a parking lot and as they were pulling up, the man allegedly produced a firearm and shot at the officer who was still seated in their police car.

Police say man suffers injuries during a robbery in Surrey

COVID-19 cases, deaths surge ahead of long weekend

COVID-19 cases, deaths surge ahead of long weekend
Trudeau urged Canadians to do everything they could to slow the virus in coming weeks, acknowledging that Thanksgiving would have to be a curtailed affair.

COVID-19 cases, deaths surge ahead of long weekend

Feds revamp pandemic rent-relief program

Feds revamp pandemic rent-relief program
He said a revamped commercial rent-relief program will cover up to 65 per cent of eligible expenses for companies, and up to 90 per cent for those subject to localized lockdowns.

Feds revamp pandemic rent-relief program

WFP says it shares Nobel Peace Prize with Canada

WFP says it shares Nobel Peace Prize with Canada
Spokeswoman Julie Marshall says Canada is the UN organization’s seventh-largest donor, contributing more than $250 million in 2019, and has supported its work for 50 years.

WFP says it shares Nobel Peace Prize with Canada

Champagne to meet Belarus opposition leader

Champagne to meet Belarus opposition leader
Champagne will meet with representatives of the secretary-general of the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which is calling for peaceful negotiations between Azerbaijan and Armenia after the recent flare-up their long dispute over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Champagne to meet Belarus opposition leader

Green leader asks Trudeau to suspend byelections

Green leader asks Trudeau to suspend byelections
Annamie Paul, who took the reins of the Green Party of Canada last Saturday, is also the party's candidate in the Oct. 26 byelection in Toronto Centre.

Green leader asks Trudeau to suspend byelections