Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
National

We Did It Right:' Covid-19 Scare At Oilsands Work Camp Tests Businesses' Plans

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2020 07:49 PM

    CALGARY - A COVID-19 scare at an oilsands staff lodge north of Fort McMurray, Alta., last week tested the pandemic preparedness of one of the many businesses that house, feed and transport workers at resource extraction sites.

     

    Civeo Corp., which runs the Borealis Lodge by Suncor Energy's base mine, said Friday that a worker staying there was taken to hospital with novel-coronavirus-like symptoms. On Tuesday, it said the test was negative.

     

    Ian Robb, Canadian director of the hospitality industry union Unite Here, said Civeo and other work-camp operators are taking the pandemic threat seriously.

     

    "I have to commend the Civeo protocols. Yes, that individual came back negative. But nothing would have been handled different if he'd come back positive," said Robb, also administrator of Unite Here Local 47, which represents Alberta work-camp cleaners and cooks.

     

    "We did it right. We did it following those directives and the workers listened."

     

    Oilsands mines rely on thousands of workers from across the country who fly to sites and stay there for several days or weeks at a time.

     

    Companies have sent non-essential staff home, but some are allowing workers who don't want to risk travelling to hunker down in lodges on their days off, Robb said.

     

    He said lodges these days generally have private rooms, but special care is being taken in common areas such as dining rooms, where staff are working 10-hour days wiping and sanitizing.

     

    He said as soon as the worker at Borealis fell ill, the dining room was closed and resanitized. Dinner was served as takeout.

     

    "Their protocols and their readiness was tested that day," said Robb. "It was pretty much flawless."

     

    Diversified Transportation, which buses workers to oilsands sites, said it's locking down washrooms, supplying more disinfectant wipes and hand sanitizer, boosting cleaning, and carrying fewer passengers so they can sit further apart.

     

    Canadian North is continuing to fly workers to and from their jobs, but with extra precautions.

     

    "We provide an operationally critical role for them," said the airline's communications manager, Kelly Lewis. "What we do can't stop right now."

     

    Earlier this month, one of its oilsands-bound planes turned back to Edmonton because one of the crew got word that a family member had tested positive for COVID-19.

     

    Lewis said Canadian North started tracking the emerging COVID-19 threat in January and formed a committee to prepare.

     

    Blankets, pillows and in-flight magazines have been taken away. Frequently touched surfaces are being sprayed down with a bleach solution.

     

    Workers travelling to or from sites are presenting paper boarding cards instead of reusable plastic ones. Passengers are being spaced as far apart as possible.

     

    Scott Davis, director of emergency management for the Regional Municipality of Wood Buffalo, said the municipality has a mutual aid agreement with oilsands operators, but generally companies have the resources and ability to handle situations themselves.

     

    "I feel they're taking great steps," said Davis, who noted that there's enough space in accommodations to allow for isolation.

     

    Davis said he's had daily calls with Alberta Health Services and he's comfortable the Northern Lights Regional Heath Centre in Fort McMurray is well prepared to treat any COVID-19 cases.

     

    "I haven't heard anything of concern from them whatsoever. My understanding is they're coping well."

     

    Davis said shutting down work camps is not an option.

     

    "It is a critical service," he said. "They do provide critical employment in northern Alberta ... Oil is a critical need."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Suspect Accused Of Killing 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl Appears In Court

    Suspect Accused Of Killing 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl Appears In Court
    ST-JEROME, Que. - The suspect charged with first-degree murder in the violent death of a 13-year-old Quebec girl appeared in court briefly Wednesday, his feet and hands shackled

    Suspect Accused Of Killing 13-Year-Old Quebec Girl Appears In Court

    Women With Transvaginal Mesh Implants To Share $21.5 Million In Settlement

    Women With Transvaginal Mesh Implants To Share $21.5 Million In Settlement
    TORONTO - A group of Canadian women who suffered ill-effects from implantation of a medical device called transvaginal mesh will receive a total of $21.5 million in compensation under a proposed class-action settlement, court records show.

    Women With Transvaginal Mesh Implants To Share $21.5 Million In Settlement

    Ex-Police Chief Sentenced To 15 Months In Jail For Sexually Exploiting Teen

    Ex-Police Chief Sentenced To 15 Months In Jail For Sexually Exploiting Teen
    BRIDGEWATER, N.S. - A former police chief in Nova Scotia has been sentenced to 15 months in jail and one year of probation after being convicted last October of sexually exploiting a teen with mental health issues.    

    Ex-Police Chief Sentenced To 15 Months In Jail For Sexually Exploiting Teen

    PM Creates COVID-19 Cabinet Committee To Deal With Novel Coronavirus

    OTTAWA - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has created a new cabinet committee to deal with the novel coronavirus outbreak, which began in China but now has spread around the world.    

    PM Creates COVID-19 Cabinet Committee To Deal With Novel Coronavirus

    Majority Of Canadians Unhappy With Trudeau's Handling Of Blockade Crisis: Poll

    According to the Leger Marketing survey, 61 per cent of respondents said they were dissatisfied with the way the prime minister has handled the blockade file.

    Majority Of Canadians Unhappy With Trudeau's Handling Of Blockade Crisis: Poll

    Ignorance Driving Racism Against First Nations After Blockades: Minister

    OTTAWA - The federal cabinet minister for diversity, inclusion and youth says racism targeted at Indigenous people in the wake of national anti-pipeline protests is "horrible."    

    Ignorance Driving Racism Against First Nations After Blockades: Minister