OH&S DUE DILIGENCE IN ONTARIO
Benefits Of This Program:
- Complete program for supervisors and managers on how to implement and manage OH&S due diligence standards in the workplace
- Confronting reality of workplace accidents that fatally injure hundreds and permanently disable thousands of Ontario workers each year
- Awareness of frequency of corporations, supervisors, officers, and directors being convicted of violating the OHSA
- Preventive insight to avoid corporate fines as high as $100,000 to $500,000 and individual fines up to $25,000, plus jail terms
- Considering courts’ and prosecutors’ increasing perception of OH&S violations as “crimes” under the Criminal Code of Canada
- Applying court-established OH&S due diligence standards to prevent most accidents and prosecutions as part of workplace health and safety programs
Learn:
- Concurrent responsibilities of workplace parties
- Reasons to go beyond the OHSA and regulations
- Use of non-government standards and guideline as “every precaution reasonable”
- Understanding the responsibilities and potential liability of corporate officers and directors
- How to implement proactive systems
- How to establish a health and safety program that meets key, court-established due diligence standards
- Understanding court standards for hazard identification, monitoring, and communication: why you can’t argue “we didn’t know” about a hazard, practice, or new issue at the workplace
- Meeting court expectations of discipline: how and when to discipline for health and safety infractions
- How and when to use notes and checklists (precedents provided)
Agenda
Obligations under the Occupational Health and Safety Act – A Refresher
- The workplace parties: employers, constructors, supervisors, officers and directors, workers
- Basic obligations of each party under the Act
- Obligation to ensure competency of supervision
- How the obligations of the parties fit together
- Regulations: how they fit with the Act and determining which ones apply to the workplace
Consequences for Failure to Meet Obligations Under the Act
What happens if you violate the Act
- Penalty provisions for corporations and individuals
- Aggressive enforcement
- Trends in sentencing and fines being imposed against companies, supervisors, officers, and directors
How to Bring Due Diligence to the Workplace: A Step-by Step Review
- Components of a workplace program of due diligence
- How to implement an ongoing due diligence program
- Identification of foreseeable hazards in the workplace
- Developing proper policies, practices, and procedures: supervisory role in development and on-going review
- Supervision and expectations of supervisors
- Ensuring proper training in specific policies and rules for work
- Ensuring worker familiarity with specific safety hazards and risks with work
- Creating a system to ensure that supervisors train each new and transferred worker in procedures and specific hazards
- Creating a system to alert workers to hazards of new equipment, machinery and communicate, and coordinate work
- Creating a system to monitor compliance
- Auditing and inspecting for risks
- Creating a system for ongoing reminders of risks and policies, practices, and procedures (crew meetings and other mechanisms)
- Determining whether supervisors are monitoring with sufficient frequency for risks
- Real court case examples and problems or relevant workplace issues dealing with key components of due diligence
- Practical aspects of distinction between how the company properly implements due diligence and how supervisors and managers implement personal due diligence
Discipline for Safety infractions: An Important Aspect of Due Diligence
- Court comments and arbitral review of discipline for health and safety
- Practical and legal aspects of imposing discipline effectively
- Case examples and problems using actual arbitration cases
Documentation of Due Diligence Efforts
- Importance of supervisory documentation of key due diligence components
- Documentation of facts to support discipline and the disciplinary process
- Limitation periods for prosecutions under OSHA and time frames for maintaining documentation
Book an In-House or Remote Program
For further information on our training, please call your lawyer at the Firm. If you are not a current client, please contact:
Program Administrator
Tel: 416-862-1616 or 1-866-821-7306
[email protected]
contact
Phone: +1 416-875-2235
Fax: 416-363-7358
Email: [email protected]
Website: https://newstaging.stringerllp.com
contact
Phone: +1 416-875-2235
Fax: 416-363-7358
Email: [email protected]
Website: https://newstaging.stringerllp.com