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Our blog discussing workplace safety opportunities in Nova Scotia and around the world.


May justice come from tragedy
** Below is an opinion editorial from WCB Nova Scotia CEO Stuart MacLean on the recent criminal charges laid under Bill c45, the Westray Bill

I will never forget waking up on May 9th, 1992 to news that 26 miners were trapped underground following a massive explosion at the Westray mine. 

Many Nova Scotians remember the heartbreaking images of families waiting at the mine opening for news of their loved ones. We all shared in their terrible grief when we later learned that their worst fears were confirmed.

Westray is forever engrained in our minds as a failure of workplace safety. It brought to light inherent weaknesses of workplace safety practices and the legislation of the time - not just in Nova Scotia, but right across Canada.

From that disaster came Bill C45, the Westray Bill, which allows criminal charges to be laid for workplace safety violations. 

But since C45 became law, criminal charges have only been laid a handful of times in Canada, with very few convictions. In Nova Scotia, there had been no charges laid at all, until this week.

On Thursday, criminal charges were laid in our province for a workplace fatality. This is a historic milestone, and one that many feel was a long time coming. 

When someone dies at work, something has gone horribly wrong. 

I speak with far too many people who experience this tragedy.

I speak with wives, mothers, family members who just want the person they hugged goodbye in the morning to walk through the door for supper, like they had every day before. 

What happened to Mr. Peter Kempton was a preventable, unthinkable tragedy. And although it’s true we have seen improvements, zero is the only acceptable number of workplace fatalities.

We at WCB Nova Scotia commend our Workplace Safety Strategy partners at the Department of Labour and Advanced Education, the Halifax Regional Police, the RCMP, and the prosecutors who are holding people accountable for workplace safety. The laying of criminal charges under the Westray Bill for the first time in our province speaks to an evolving safety culture.

Our hearts go out to Mr. Kempton’s family, and to every family that has lost a loved one to workplace tragedy. 

May these charges send a strong message. Safety is everyone’s responsibility, and it is not enough to simply know about workplace safety. You must truly care about it, and do everything within your power to keep yourself, your co-workers, and your employees safe.



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