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Legislation

The Occupational Health Safety Act (OHSA) defines duties and responsibilities in workplaces. Below is a summary of duties and responsibilities as listed in the OHSA, for a full description please visit the Ministry of Labour web site.

Employer  (UW Departments)

Supervisors

It is also a supervisor’s responsibility to ensure that workers receive proper job-specific training in the workplace with regard to equipment operation, hazard awareness and personal protective equipment.  A faculty or staff member who supervises a paid worker (Student Research Assistants, Post-Doctoral Fellows, Technicians, Apprentices, etc.) is considered a “supervisor”. 

Employees (workers)

Everyone employed at the UW is considered to be a worker.  Also, students paid as Research or Teaching Assistants are deemed as workers. 


Workers’ Rights

Under the OHSA and the WHMIS (Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System) regulations workers have the following basic rights in the workplace:

Right to Participate

Workers have the right to be part of the process of identifying and resolving workplace health and safety concerns.
This right is expressed through worker membership on UW’s Joint Health and Safety Committee.

Right to Know

Workers have the right to know about any potential hazard to which they may be exposed. This means the right to be trained and to have information on machinery, equipment, processes and hazardous substances.
Your work area specific training is provided through your department and supervisor.
UW’s Health, Safety and Environment Program includes training provided through the Safety Office.

UW training programs

Right to Refuse Unsafe Work

A worker may refuse to work or do particular work where he or she has reason to believe that,

The following procedure must be followed in a work refusal situation:

  1. Immediately report refusal to work to your supervisor. Worker remains in a safe location near the work area.
  2. Supervisor notifies Safety Office.
  3. Safety Office arranges for worker member of Joint Health and Safety Committee (JHSC) to attend work area.
  4. The supervisor would then investigate the situation in the presence of the worker who refused, a worker member of JHSC and a Safety Office representative.
  5. If the situation is resolved then worker returns to work.
  6. If the worker still believes the work to be unsafe then the Ministry of Labour is notified. Pending a further investigation the worker may be assigned other work.