The increased enforcement is part of the province’s Safe At Work Ontario strategy, launched in June 2008.
The inspectors will focus on hazards involving haulage of materials found in surface mining operations and the equipment used in the movement and transportation of that material.
These hazards can endanger the health and safety of workers.
Aggregate material – made up of stone, sand and gravel – is mined at thousands of pits and quarries in Ontario. This material is used to build roads and in nearly all residential, commercial and industrial construction.
Since 2000, 10 workers have died in pits and quarries in Ontario. Two of them were involved in incidents related to rock crushing, screening and conveying processes. During the same period, 61 workers were seriously injured in pits and quarries. Four workers were involved in incidents related to rock crushing, screening and conveying processes.
Hauling hazards can include:
Ministry of Labour inspectors will target pits and quarries:
Inspectors will take enforcement action, as appropriate, for any contraventions found under the Occupational Health and Safety Act and its regulations.
The blitz will be held to:
Inspectors will focus on the following key priorities:
The increased enforcement is part of the province’s Safe At Work Ontario enforcement strategy, launched in June 2008.
A team of more than 25 Ministry of Labour inspectors will visit construction sites that use tower and mobile cranes. The inspectors have received special training and will climb each tower crane that they inspect.
They will check for compliance with the Occupational Health and Safety Act and its regulations. They will focus on hazards that could endanger the health and safety of workers.
Enforcement action, as appropriate, will be taken for any violations of the act and its regulations.
Under the Regulations for Construction Projects, a tower crane is a defined as a mechanical device or structure that is of the travelling, fixed or climbing type and that has a
Used to erect high rise buildings, a tower crane can hoist and move material at great heights on construction sites.
A mobile crane is a mechanical device or structure that incorporates a boom that is
These cranes are designed to be easily transported to a site and used with different types of cargo and loads.
Hazards involving tower and mobile cranes can lead to catastrophic events. For example, if a poorly maintained tower crane collapses, workers on the construction site could be injured or killed. Even the public can be affected if a tower crane falls or drops a heavy load.
All cranes are:
There have been a number of incidents involving serious injuries to workers, as well as some close calls, involving cranes in the past few years.
Between 2007 and 2011, one worker died and seven workers were seriously injured in incidents involving a tower crane or mobile crane at construction sites across Ontario, according to Ministry of Labour reports.
Of the injury incidents, four were related to tower cranes and three were related to mobile cranes.
The injuries resulted from incidents such as a:
Close calls (in which no one was injured) involved a:
Inspectors will focus on the following key priorities:
Ontario will perform safety blitzes of construction sites and surface mines across Ontario this summer.
In July and August, inspectors from the Ministry of Labour will visit construction sites and check for hazards involving tower and mobile cranes that could result in injury or death to workers as well as the public. Inspectors will also target activities involving the transportation of stone, sand, gravel and other raw materials at mining pits and quarries.
During the blitzes, inspectors will check on maintenance of equipment, worker training, the use of safety equipment and other potential health and safety hazards to help prevent workplace injuries.
Protecting workers on the job is part of the McGuinty government’s continued commitment to preventing workplace injuries through its Safe at Work Ontario strategy, while creating jobs.