January 19, 2006
ONTARIO MINISTRY OF LABOUR
Labour Minister Steve Peters (front row centre) and Assistant Deputy Minister Helle Tosine (seventh from the left) with 32 new health and safety inspectors following their graduation last August at the Ontario Heritage Centre.
Safety inspectors having a positive impact
TORONTO
The province is making good on its promise to hire additional Ministry of Labour health and safety inspectors to cut down on workplace injuries and deaths.
In July 2004, then Minister of Labour Chris Bentley announced the province would hire 200 new inspectors — almost doubling its existing 230 inspector workforce — over a two-year period to achieve a goal of preventing 60,000 workplace injuries a year by 2008.
Based on the average cost of a workplace injury, eliminating 60,000 injuries annually will also translate into savings for businesses of up to $960 million per year.
Recruitment of the first 100 candidates began immediately and initially targeted 6,000 workplaces with the highest injury rates, including construction sites as determined based on workers’ compensation claims filed with the Workplace Safety & Insurance Board (WSIB), Bentley said at the time.
“To date, 131 inspectors and have been hired and remaining 69 will be hired by May,” says Vic Pakalnis, the Ministry official in charge of recruitment and training.
By next December, that final contingent of inspectors will have completed two phases of three months’ training. Seventy of the 200 new inspectors will focus on the construction sector, he says.
There’s been overwhelming interest in the program with 5,000 applications alone for the remaining 69 positions, says Pakalnis.
Applicants are required to have five years “of good standing” in the industry sector they will be monitoring. In other words, construction inspectors must have a construction background.
Short-listed candidates also go through a rigorous two-stage interview process and successfully pass a series of behavioural and technical tests. That screening process is necessary because of the complex and difficult nature of a safety inspector’s role, says Pakalnis.
“They must have patience and know how to keep their cool. It’s a tough job, making decisions on disputes that can involve two or multiple parties, and often under conflict. They must have the right stuff and have a passion for the work. It’s not just another job.”
Once hired, they receive a first-phase three months of training to enable them to conduct inspections. After working in the field for a few months, the inspectors return to the classrooms for three more months of training which qualifies them to conduct investigations and testify at coroner’s inquests. The Ministry of Labour conducts the training sessions with the assistance of the Construction Safety Association of Ontario and various safety associations, says Pakalnis.
Judging by the comments of some construction representatives, the safety inspectors now on the job are making an impact.
“I’ve have had some feedback that the new inspectors are giving tickets rather than warnings. I think that’s a positive, rather than a negative thing. Certain safety violations such as not wearing safety boots or helmets or tying down safety harnesses should be obvious,” says Pat Dillon, business manager of the Provincial Building & Construction Trades Council of Ontario.
“But I would be upset if only workers were getting tickets and not the supervisors. It (safety) is a dual responsibility.”
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
| CURRENT STORIES |
- Tower rises at DJ Campbell Construction’s Casa condominium project
- High-school construction teacher fined after dispute with Ministry of Labour inspector
- Enforcement key to protecting road crews, says Ontario Road Builders’ Association
- Restoration Environmental Contractors take down smokestack at former Phillips Cable facility in Brockville
- Treatment of Chinese workers brings union disputes and calls for public inquiry
- Korky Koroluk: Rising price of oil affects more than just the price of gas
- SNC-Lavalin acquires Nova Scotia engineering firm C.J. MacLellan
- SNC-Lavalin wins contract to build two natural gas compressor stations in France
- U.S. manufacturing activity expands, construction spending declines
| 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 
- Will China be another Japan? (2) (July 4, 2008)
- Will China be another Japan? (1) (July 3, 2008)
- The Export Dependency of Canada’s Provinces (July 2, 2008)
Lifestyle Blog More 
- High Finance, Carrick Family Style (June 30, 2008)
- A Dozen Ways to Lure American Visitors to Canada (June 23, 2008)
| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Menkes sets early 2009 start date for Four Seasons hotel project (Jul 3, 2008)
- Ottawa’s Congress Centre prepares to set green example (Jul 3, 2008)
- York Region plans Keswick odour-control facility (Jul 3, 2008)
- Durham Region plans expansion of transit facility (Jul 3, 2008)
- Vrancor negotiates with City of Oshawa for downtown brownfield site (Jul 2, 2008)
