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Employer groups drop out of WorkSafeBC review in protest

NDP government鈥檚 reviewer 鈥榖iased, exceeding mandate鈥
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B.C. Labour Minister Harry Bains. (Hansard TV)

The B.C. government鈥檚 latest review of WorkSafeBC policies and payouts has taken a left turn toward recommendations made by organized labour a decade ago, B.C.鈥檚 large business organizations say.

Employer groups including the Business Council of B.C., the B.C. Construction Association and the B.C. Restaurant and Food Services Association wrote to retired labour lawyer Janet Patterson, the head of the B.C. government鈥檚 review Wednesday. They said the 鈥渟elected issues鈥 chosen by Patterson for review exceed the mandate they were expecting and match closely with her report 10 years ago commissioned by the B.C. Federation of Labour.

鈥淭he employer community is quite taken aback and dismayed with the extremely broad and far-reaching scope of these 鈥榮elected issues,鈥 and after giving the matter due consideration and consulting with various representatives of the employer community, we have determined that we have no choice but to cease all participation in the review鈥檚 process, effective immediately,鈥 wrote Doug Alley of the Employers鈥 Forum, representing the 46 business groups.

After the review was announced this spring, Labour Minister Harry Bains assured the Council of Construction Associations in June that it was narrow and focused on improving worker navigation of injury claims and improve performance, 鈥渘ot to make wholesale changes to the workers鈥 compensation system鈥 that employers fund, the letter states.

But a memo to employers last week listing the 鈥渟elected issues鈥 shows that they were contained in a 2009 report co-authored by Patterson entitled 鈥淎dding Insult to Injury.鈥 The B.C. Federation of Labour鈥檚 submission to the current review in July called for the 2009 report to be considered.

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鈥淲e were willing to participate in a balanced an impartial process to review the system,鈥 Richard Truscott, B.C. and Alberta vice president of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, said in a statement Wednesday. 鈥淗owever, the writing has been on the wall from the very beginning that the review lacked objectivity.鈥

The 46 employer organizations made their own initial submission to Patterson in July, questioning terms such as 鈥済ender-based analysis鈥 and moving to a 鈥渨orker-centric delivery model鈥 that were not clearly defined.

WorkSafeBC is responsible for 45,000 sick or injured workers and more than 4,000 spouses and children who depend on pension payments. It administers an insurance system paid into by 238,000 B.C. employers, where workers give up their right to sue employers for negligence in exchange for no-fault compensation that is independently administered.

Reviewing WorkSafeBC was one of the terms of the B.C. Green Party agreement to support the minority NDP government in 2017.



tfletcher@blackpress.ca

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