Tuesday, April 7, 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

Federal deficit hits $148.6B through July

Federal deficit hits $148.6B through July
The result compared with a deficit of $1.6 billion for the same period in the 2019-2020 fiscal year.

Federal deficit hits $148.6B through July

PM 'disappointed' by RCMP mask policy

PM 'disappointed' by RCMP mask policy
The World Sikh Organization of Canada says officers have been placed on desk duty for almost six months, as the RCMP found the N100 mask does not seal with facial hair.

PM 'disappointed' by RCMP mask policy

Forces nears end to long search for rescue planes

Forces nears end to long search for rescue planes
The unveiling at Canadian Forces Base Comox, B.C., follows more than 15 years of controversy and start-stop effort to buy replacements for the ancient Buffalo and older-model Hercules aircraft used by the military to save Canadians every year.

Forces nears end to long search for rescue planes

Mistrial declared in N.L. cop's sex assault trial

Mistrial declared in N.L. cop's sex assault trial
Const. Carl Douglas Snelgrove of the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary was facing his second trial for allegedly sexually assaulting a woman he had driven home in his police vehicle in 2014.

Mistrial declared in N.L. cop's sex assault trial

Corruption charges stayed against Normandeau

Corruption charges stayed against Normandeau
Quebec court Judge Andre Perreault ruled today that there had been unreasonable delays in getting the case to trial.

Corruption charges stayed against Normandeau

Mounties arrest an arson suspect

Mounties arrest an arson suspect
A 26-year-old man from Chilliwack remains in custody on an unrelated warrant of arrest.

Mounties arrest an arson suspect