LATEST NEWS
July 11, 2008
Forklift fatality prompts calls for improvements to Alberta’s safety code
The death of a teenager working at a building material supply store near Edmonton last month is raising questions about the need to improve Alberta’s safety code.
Mitchell Tanner, 16, was killed in June 2008 at the Rona Building Centre in St. Albert. According to media reports, Tanner was a passenger on a forklift, which was being operated by a 17-year-old, when it tipped over and crushed him.
The incident is still under investigation by police and provincial officials.
“What we hear is that neither one of these young men were trained and shouldn’t have been on the forklift, but we have no way to confirm this,” said Gary Wagar, executive director of the Alberta Construction Safety Association.
“If this turns out to be true, there are significant implications for the company, because they were using the forklift without proper authority or training.”
The Alberta Federation of Labour (AFL) said Tanner’s death may have been avoided with tougher legislation.
“We sent a letter to the minister and have been raising concerns for two years about a lack of a code of practice for forklifts,” said Gil McGowan, AFL president.
“There is some language in the occupational health and safety code about heavy equipment in general.”
Wagar agreed that there is a requirement in the safety code to train workers when they operate equipment that poses a hazard, but that the forklift is not specifically mentioned.
According to McGowan, Alberta’s Occupational Health and Safety Code is too quiet on the matter.
The only two provisions require a legible load rating chart and that if the lift has seat belts, the belts must be used and be maintained in good condition.
“Because our code says nothing about forklifts, employers do very little to ensure they are used safely,” he said.
“There is inadequate training on what should and should not be done and the result, unfortunately, are accidents.”
McGowan said forklifts are a regular and particularly problematic safety problem in workplaces.
“There needs to be regulations about forklifts in particular, because the accident rate is so high. Every year there are dozens of accidents that involve the improper use of a forklift,” he said.
“These are dangerous pieces of equipment and nobody should get behind the wheel without proper training in safety and forklift operation.”
Wagar said that the provincial government and industry associations have already developed a safety awareness program for schools.
A safety video for the program deals with the issue of mobile equipment and specifically addresses the use of forklifts.
“The provincial government spent $750,000 on the program, but it was pulled before the last election,” Wagar said.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- DCN election poll finds Conservatives still in the lead
- DCN election poll puts Stephen Harper’s Conservatives out in front
- PCL Constructors team expands Air Canada Centre
- Dubai plans to top its own record with new tower
- Stantec joins Infusion Health consortium on P3 hospital project
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| CURRENT STORIES |
- EllisDon reaches for the top at Bay Adelaide Centre
- Open-shop contractors and trades council agree next federal government must broaden skilled-labour focus
- Sewer, watermain contractors beat election drum for infrastructure cash
- National Trade Contractors Coalition of Canada plans to publish guide to CCA’s stipulated price subcontract document
- Foreign carpenters displaced local tradesmen at Winnipeg airport project, MP charges
- Aecon Buildings nears completion of Bell Creekbank project
- ‘Request for proposal’ wording could expose owners to tender law obligations, lawyer warns
- Korky Koroluk: Popularity of heavy-duty hybrid trucks fails to live up to the hype
- Oklahoma Transportation Commission approves $4-billion infrastructure improvement program
- Rockway Building Supplies pleads guilty in electrical-shock incident
| 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 
- Why are the Conservatives and Stephen Harper taking it on the Chin? (October 10, 2008)
- Standing up in a Convertible while Driving under a Bridge (October 9, 2008)
- Phrase of the Day: Libor (October 8, 2008)
Lifestyle Blog More 
- Three Cities with a Lot in Common: Calgary, Edmonton and Venice (September 29, 2008)
- How to Get Ahead in this Life (September 25, 2008)
| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Viljoen Architects readies working drawings for Stonebridge by the Bay (Sep 15, 2008)
- REC Silicon plans $1.2-billion manufacturing plant in Quebec (Sep 15, 2008)
- Construction underway at Interfor’s Adams Lake sawmill (Sep 11, 2008)
- Alcan moves closer to construction of Kitimat aluminum smelter (Sep 11, 2008)
- Town of Oliver presses on with plans for wine village (Sep 11, 2008)
