January 19, 2006
Butting out on the job site
TORONTO
Workplace smoking legislation has largely bypassed the construction industry on the assumption that any smoking takes place in the open air.
The new Smoke-Free Ontario Act, however, may dramatically curtail workplace smoking when it takes effect on May 31 —even on construction sites.
Ontario’s Smoking in the Workplace Act, in effect since 1990, was aimed at tobacco use inside buildings. The new Act will extend itself to any enclosed workplace, enclosed public space and enclosed workplace vehicle. While regulations have yet to be fine-tuned, the legislation definitely means that smoking will be forbidden in enclosed construction vehicles, site trailers, portable toilet enclosures and tents.
Beyond that, the legislation becomes more difficult to interpret. An enclosed space will be defined as any building or vehicle with a roof on it. At what point during construction of a building does the outdoors become the indoors — when the walls go up, when a ceiling is installed, or when the roof has been completed?
“That’s an excellent question and there isn’t any easy answer to it,” says Ryan J. Conlin, an associate with Ontario legal firm Stringer Brisbin Humphrey, specializing in occupational health and safety. “At some mythical point, an inspector decides the building under construction is covered by a roof. What will that mean in the real world? The people drafting this bill haven’t spent a great deal of time on industry specifics.”
New regulations will also oblige employers to make sure that all people on a construction site—including visitors and contractors—comply with smoking regulations. Failure to comply could result in stiff penalties, says Conlin.
“Individuals could be fined a maximum of $4,000 on a first offence and corporations up to $10,000. Fines would escalate for subsequent convictions, up to a potential maximum of $300,000 for a corporation. Even things that may seem like minor technicalities, such as having an ashtray visible, can result in fines.”
The Ontario Ministry of Health Promotion promises to clarify employer and worker responsibilities under the Act as the May deadline approaches.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Police probe death at York Street construction site
- Ontario’s apprentice ratio dispute continues to be split along union, non-union lines
- Hard Rock contracting companies fined over worker injuries
- Early LEED advocates were ‘pioneers,’ ACEC president says
- Two Ontario firms win Canadian Architect Awards of Excellence
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| CURRENT STORIES |
- EllisDon keeps moving up at the Ritz-Carlton
- Insulation association lobbies for inclusion of best practices in National Building Code
- AGC survey finds two-thirds of U.S. non-residential construction companies plan layoffs in 2009
- Bulldozer fatality halts work at Anatolia Minerals’ Copler gold project
- Canadian economy heads south for the winter
- Homicide charge laid in N.Y. crane collapse
- McKay-Cocker chooses Viewpoint software to integrate operations
- Great Lands digs deep at the Mona Lisa
- U.S. investors drop stakes in proposed TransCanada pipeline
- Aecon named one of Canada’s 10 Best Employers
- Solar module maker Day4 Energy lays off 95 workers
| ALEX’S BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in Canada's economic environment. He also shares light-hearted reflections on life and current events.
Economics Blog More 
- Spotting the U.S. and Canadian Recoveries – Earliest Indicators (January 6, 2009)
- TYBA Projects (January 5, 2009)
- Ottawa’s Spending and Canada in Afghanistan (December 30, 2008)
Lifestyle Blog More 
- The Perils of Driving in the White Stuff (December 29, 2008)
- Economics Humour – Take my Dismal Science, Please (December 22, 2008)
| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Vanbots begins work on Thompson Rivers University’s House of Learning (Jan 6, 2009)
- City of Thompson plans new water treatment plant (Dec 30, 2008)
- Quadrangle Architects begins working drawings for new phase of Downtown Markham development (Dec 16, 2008)
- Designs for new Corrections Canada office set to begin (Dec 15, 2008)
- Haastown Holdings ready to accept subtrade pricing for Waterscape phase one (Dec 15, 2008)
