Friday, July 3, 2026
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

    Analysts Suggest Calgary Byelection A Litmus Test For Alberta Tory Survivability

    The Calgary Greenway seat became vacant last November when Tory legislature member Manmeet Bhullar was killed in a chain reaction highway crash after he got out of his vehicle to help a stranded motorist.

    Analysts Suggest Calgary Byelection A Litmus Test For Alberta Tory Survivability

    Federal Government Says B.C. LNG Decision Coming After 90-Day Review

    Environment Minister Catherine McKenna said Monday she expects the federal cabinet to be ready to make a decision after another 90 days on the proposed $36-billion Pacific NorthWest LNG export project near Prince Rupert.

    Federal Government Says B.C. LNG Decision Coming After 90-Day Review

    Vancouver Still Leads The Country In Traffic Congestion

    Vancouver Still Leads The Country In Traffic Congestion
    Vancouver remains Canada's most congested city, followed by Toronto and Montreal, but the study shows all three are inching toward improvement.

    Vancouver Still Leads The Country In Traffic Congestion

    Federal Budget Expected To Defer Some Liberal Campaign Promises

    Federal Budget Expected To Defer Some Liberal Campaign Promises
    The Trudeau government's maiden budget will make it easier for jobless Canadians to collect employment insurance benefits and will target some additional EI measures at workers in energy-producing provinces hit hard by the plunge in oil prices.

    Federal Budget Expected To Defer Some Liberal Campaign Promises

    Spotlight Set To Fall On Jian Ghomeshi Case As Judgment Looms

    More than a month after the sexual assault trial of Jian Ghomeshi captured the country's attention, the spotlight is set to fall once again on the disgraced broadcaster and his accusers as an Ontario judge delivers his decision this week.

    Spotlight Set To Fall On Jian Ghomeshi Case As Judgment Looms

    Car2Go Won't Wait For Toronto To OK Its Full Car-share Service; Restarts March 31

    Car2Go Won't Wait For Toronto To OK Its Full Car-share Service; Restarts March 31
    The move by Car2go's car-sharing offering would bring its Toronto operation into line with what's already available in other North American cities.

    Car2Go Won't Wait For Toronto To OK Its Full Car-share Service; Restarts March 31