Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Labour Ministers Discuss Harmonizing Provincial Work Safety Standards

The Canadian Press, 10 Sep, 2016 01:18 PM
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Governments across the country are aiming to harmonize occupational health and safety requirements to make it easier for businesses who do work in different provinces and territories to adhere to the rules.
     
    Provincial and territorial labour ministers gathered for an annual meeting with federal Labour Minister MaryAnn Mihychuk in Prince George, B.C., on Friday.
     
    British Columbia's Labour Minister Shirley Bond says many companies do business across provinces and struggle to meet the unique health and safety regulations in each jurisdiction.
     
    Bond says provincial ministers presented the federal government with a working plan of how to move forward on creating harmonized regulations.
     
    Mihychuk says while they are looking at a two-year plan to unify standards, the government wants to speed up the process.
     
    Labour ministers also discussed developing a more co-ordinated approach to addressing mental-health issues such as post-traumatic stress disorder in the workplace.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Manitoba Proposes Amendments To Canada Pension Plan Deal After Opting Out

    Manitoba Proposes Amendments To Canada Pension Plan Deal After Opting Out
    WINNIPEG — A week after opting out of a deal to boost the Canada Pension Plan, Manitoba says it wants Ottawa and the provinces to consider a raft of amendments.

    Manitoba Proposes Amendments To Canada Pension Plan Deal After Opting Out

    'Who Made Me Like This?' Manitoba Killer Asks While Handed Stiff Life Sentence

    'Who Made Me Like This?' Manitoba Killer Asks While Handed Stiff Life Sentence
    WINNIPEG — A homeless man who brutally beat three other transient men to death in separate attacks blamed police as he was handed the stiffest sentence in Manitoba history — life in prison with no chance of parole for 75 years.

    'Who Made Me Like This?' Manitoba Killer Asks While Handed Stiff Life Sentence

    Officers Failed To Follow Procedures Prior To Jail Cell Death: Review

    Officers Failed To Follow Procedures Prior To Jail Cell Death: Review
    Correctional officers at a provincial jail in Cape Breton failed to follow proper procedures earlier this year when they placed a man in a cell, where he died of a drug overdose 13 hours later, Nova Scotia's Justice Department says.

    Officers Failed To Follow Procedures Prior To Jail Cell Death: Review

    'It's Just Magical': Lots To See In Iceberg Alley Off Northern Newfoundland

    'It's Just Magical': Lots To See In Iceberg Alley Off Northern Newfoundland
    ST. ANTHONY, N.L. — It's not quite peak iceberg season and already people from around the world are heading to tiny St. Anthony in northeastern Newfoundland for one of the best spectacles in years.

    'It's Just Magical': Lots To See In Iceberg Alley Off Northern Newfoundland

    Military veteran turns home into retreat for fellow PTSD sufferers

    Military veteran turns home into retreat for fellow PTSD sufferers
    SABLE RIVER, N.S. — A military veteran who found sanctuary in the woodlands of rural Nova Scotia is opening up his home to fellow servicemen and women who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Military veteran turns home into retreat for fellow PTSD sufferers

    Half-Brother Charged With Second-Yegree Murder In Young B.C. Mom Rachel Pernosky's Death

    Half-Brother Charged With Second-Yegree Murder In Young B.C. Mom Rachel Pernosky's Death
    Matthew Pernosky is charged with second-degree murder, indignity to a body and disposing of Rachel Pernosky's body.

    Half-Brother Charged With Second-Yegree Murder In Young B.C. Mom Rachel Pernosky's Death