Edmonton Journal

Forty years of making work safer

- - Written by Guy Smith, AUPE president

Forty years ago today the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE) and the Alberta government launched a co-operative occupation­al health and safety (OHS) program that remains unique in Canada to this day.

This longstandi­ng collaborat­ion has proved that unions and employers can find common ground by focusing on workplace safety.

The union/government program paved the way for joint workplace OHS committees and initiated training programs that have graduated thousands of participan­ts.

A mutual commitment to workplace health and safety has helped us to overcome challenges through the years and see the program expanded to where it is today.

The joint program started in 1977, following the adoption of the province’s first Occupation­al Health and Safety Act the year before. National attention on workplace safety had been building through the sixties and seventies in the wake of worker deaths and injuries such as those at Hoggs Hollow and Elliot Lake.

Premier Peter Lougheed hoped his government’s action on the issue could set an example for other employers in the province. The fledgling AUPE, establishe­d as an independen­t trade union in 1976, also made workplace safety a central priority.

In its first year, our union set a precedent within the Canadian labour movement by hiring Dennis Malayko to serve as a health and safety representa­tive. Malayko travelled across the province encouragin­g AUPE members to participat­e in the newly formed workplace OHS committees and providing the training and support they needed to carry out their duties.

When provincial OHS regulation was expanded in 2009, the joint program inaugurate­d a government OHS training program developed in collaborat­ion with AUPE. The Government of Alberta’s Occupation­al Health and Safety Program has since graduated more than 3,100 participan­ts.

The OHS system in Alberta is currently under review by the Department of Labour, the first comprehens­ive review since the OHS Act was introduced in 1976. AUPE was amongst the many groups that submitted feedback to the review before the Oct. 16 deadline.

Some trouble spots AUPE has identified include the need for better equipment and procedures to reduce hazards faced by correction­al peace officers including exposure to life-threatenin­g opioids such as fentanyl.

Health care workers also continue to face high rates of workplace injury, with rates of workplace violence exceeding those faced by police. AUPE is also raising awareness about the hazards for health care workers of exposure to cytotoxic medication­s, which are primarily used to treat cancer, most often as part of chemothera­py treatment.

AUPE will keep pushing for better protection­s for workers and there’s certainly a long way to go in some areas. We cannot say that the work of the OHS movement is complete until all workers can expect to come home safe from their jobs.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? AUPE set a precedent in the Canadian labour movement by hiring a full-time health and safety representa­tive in 1977. Dennis Malayko (pictured) travelled across the province assisting the newly formed workplace OHS committees.
SUPPLIED AUPE set a precedent in the Canadian labour movement by hiring a full-time health and safety representa­tive in 1977. Dennis Malayko (pictured) travelled across the province assisting the newly formed workplace OHS committees.

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