Thursday, July 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Introduces More Legislation To Improve Workplace Safety After Mill Fires

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2015 01:39 PM
    VICTORIA — Recommendations from inquests into two sawmill explosions have prompted the B.C. government to introduce legislation it says will improve safety in the workplace.
     
    The ministry responsible for jobs and labour says Bill 35 will require employers to immediately report all fires and blasts that could seriously injure workers.
     
    Bill 35 adds to workplace-safety legislation introduced earlier this year and calls on employers to specify meaningful participation for worker and employer representatives in accident investigations.
     
    Other changes would allow WorkSafeBC to proactively assist workplace health and safety committees in resolving disagreements over health and safety matters.
     
    Seven recommendations aimed at the government came out of the inquests into the blasts — at the Babine Forests Products Mill in Burns Lake and at the Lakeland Mills sawmill in Prince George.
     
    Both explosions happened within months of each other in 2012, killing four men and injuring dozens of other workers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Lawyers In B.C. Court Argue For Access To Secret Documents From Spy Agency

    Lawyers In B.C. Court Argue For Access To Secret Documents From Spy Agency
    Lawyers for a pair of British Columbia terrorists want access to secret documents from Canada's spy agency, saying they could show whether police entrapped their clients.

    Lawyers In B.C. Court Argue For Access To Secret Documents From Spy Agency

    Quebec Wants Bolder Greenhouse Gas Cuts By 2030

    Quebec Wants Bolder Greenhouse Gas Cuts By 2030
    Quebec has introduced bolder targets for greenhouse-gas reductions by 2030.

    Quebec Wants Bolder Greenhouse Gas Cuts By 2030

    Anaheim Ducks Player Clayton Stoner Charged With Illegal Grizzly Hunt In B.C. Backcountry

    Anaheim Ducks Player Clayton Stoner Charged With Illegal Grizzly Hunt In B.C. Backcountry
    Clayton Stoner of the Anaheim Ducks is accused of two counts of knowingly making a false statement to obtain a hunting licence.

    Anaheim Ducks Player Clayton Stoner Charged With Illegal Grizzly Hunt In B.C. Backcountry

    Chilliwack Parents Drop Fight To Treat Baby With Cannabis Oil As She Breathes On Her Own

    Chilliwack Parents Drop Fight To Treat Baby With Cannabis Oil As She Breathes On Her Own
    Justin Pierce and Michelle Arnold withdrew their application to share custody of their five-month-old daughter with B.C.'s Ministry of Children and Family Development

    Chilliwack Parents Drop Fight To Treat Baby With Cannabis Oil As She Breathes On Her Own

    Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Nova Scotia Police Officer Catherine Campbell

    Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Nova Scotia Police Officer Catherine Campbell
    Halifax police say Christopher Calvin Garnier is also charged with indecently interfering with a dead body

    Man Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Death Of Nova Scotia Police Officer Catherine Campbell

    Manitoba Government Is Pledging More Money To Help Syrian Refugees

    Manitoba Government Is Pledging More Money To Help Syrian Refugees
    Premier Greg Selinger says $200,000 is being given immediately to groups helping the refugees on the front lines overseas.

    Manitoba Government Is Pledging More Money To Help Syrian Refugees