BILL 160 (what are you?)
30. The short title of this Act is the Occupational Health and Safety Statute Law Amendment Act, 2011.
EXPLANATORY NOTE
This Explanatory 
Note was written as a reader’s aid to Bill 160 and does not form part of
 the law.  Bill 160 has been enacted as Chapter 11 of the Statutes of 
Ontario, 2011.
The Bill amends the Occupational Health and Safety Act and the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act, 1997.
Amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Act
Section 4.1, 
which specifies the Minister’s responsibility for the administration of 
the Act and sets out some of the Minister’s powers and duties in 
administering the Act, is added to Part II of the Act.
The Act is 
amended to allow the Chief Prevention Officer, appointed under Part II.1
 of the Act, to establish standards for training programs and to approve
 programs that meet the standards.  
The Chief Prevention Officer may 
also establish standards that a person must meet in order to become an 
approved training provider and may approve a person who meets the 
standards as a training provider with respect to one or more approved 
training programs and may collect information about workers’ successful 
completion of approved training programs for the purpose of maintaining a
 record.
Section 7.6, 
which allows the Chief Prevention Officer to establish training and 
other requirements that a member of a joint health and safety committee 
must fulfil in order to become a certified member, is added to the Act. 
 The Chief Prevention Officer may certify a committee member who meets 
the requirements.
Section 7.7 
permits the Chief Prevention Officer to delegate certain powers and duties under sections 7.1 to 7.6 to an employee in the Ministry of Labour.
Section 8 of the
 Act is amended to require a constructor or employer to ensure that 
health and safety representatives receive training to enable them to 
effectively exercise the powers and perform the duties of a 
representative.
Section 9 of the
 Act is amended to allow either co-chair of a joint health and safety 
committee to make written recommendations to a constructor or employer 
if the committee fails to reach consensus.
The Bill adds 
Part II.1 (Prevention Council, Chief Prevention Officer and Designated 
Entities) to the Act.  
Section 22.2 of the Act requires the Minister to 
establish a Prevention Council responsible for providing advice to the 
Minister on the appointment of a Chief Prevention Officer and providing 
advice to the Chief Prevention Officer on occupational health and safety
 matters.  
Section 22.3 requires the Minister to appoint a Chief 
Prevention Officer responsible for developing a provincial occupational 
health and safety strategy, preparing an annual report on occupational 
health and safety and advising the Minister on occupational health and 
safety matters.   
Section 22.4 requires that the 
advice of the Chief Prevention Officer and the position of the 
Prevention Council be obtained in respect of a proposed change to the 
funding and delivery of services for the 
prevention of workplace injuries and occupational diseases if the 
proposed change would be significant.  
Sections 22.5 to 22.9 
allow the Minister to designate an entity as a safe workplace 
association or as a medical clinic or training centre specializing in 
occupational health and safety matters if the entity meets the standards
 established by the Minister.  A designated entity must operate in 
accordance with the standards and with any other requirements imposed on
 it, and is eligible for a grant from the Ministry.
Part III.1 of 
the Act is amended to allow the Minister to approve codes of practice 
with respect to both statutory and regulatory requirements and specify 
that compliance with the code is deemed to be compliance with the 
requirement, subject to any terms or conditions set out by the Minister 
in the approval.
Section 50 of 
the Act is amended to allow an inspector to refer a matter to the Board 
where a worker alleges that his or her employer has violated the 
prohibition against reprisals and where circumstances warrant.  The 
matter cannot have been dealt with by final and binding settlement by 
arbitration under a collective agreement or by the worker filing a 
complaint with the Board and the worker must consent to the referral.
Section 50.1, 
which gives the Office of the Worker Adviser and the Office of the 
Employer Adviser prescribed functions for the purposes of Part VI of the
 Act, is added to the Act.
Section 63 of 
the Act is amended so that persons employed in the Office of the Worker 
Adviser or the Office of the Employer Adviser are not compellable 
witnesses in a civil suit or any proceeding respecting any information 
or material furnished to or obtained, made or received by them under the
 Act while acting within the scope of their employment.
Subsection 70 (2) of the Act is amended to add complementary regulation-making authority.
Provisions 
relating to the load bearing capacity of structures are updated to 
remove references to an engineering design method that is no longer 
current.
Other complementary and transitional amendments are made to the Act.
Amendments to the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act, 1997
Part II (Injury 
and Disease Prevention) of the Act is repealed.  
The substance of 
subsection 4 (2) and section 10 of that Part (dealing with payments to 
constructions workers and first aid requirements that may be set by the 
Board) is re-enacted elsewhere in the Act.
Section 159 is 
amended to exempt information sharing agreements between the Board and 
the Ministry of Labour from the requirement that the agreement be 
approved by the Lieutenant Governor in Council.
Transition from WSIB to Ministry of Labour
Bill 160 amendments to the Occupational Health and Safety Act provided for the transfer of several WSIB functions, including the Research Advisory Council, from the WSIB to the Ministry of Labour (MoL). The transition of the research program from the WSIB to the MOL is under way, and the Ministry continues to build capacity. Once the Ministry’s Prevention Council is in place, the Chief Prevention Officer will initiate a review of research priorities.In the meantime, the WSIB is working closely with the MoL on key transition issues, including the management of the Bridging the Gap competition. The 2012-13 Bridging the Gap application process will follow much the same cycle as in previous years. The key difference is that the authority for final approval of proposals no longer rests with the WSIB Board of Directors, but with the Chief Prevention Officer.

 
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