This is an interesting decision - the union grieved extra PPE protection for its' members.
Joint health and safety committee
had power to prescribe safety equipment but employer could still do so without
committee’s recommendation
November 2, 2012
The
health and safety of employees is ultimately the responsibility of the employer
and can’t be delegated to a joint health and safety committee, an Ontario
arbitrator has ruled.
Gerdau
Ameristeel, a steel manufacturing company, introduced a policy in its Whitby,
Ont., plant requiring employees to wear chin straps on their safety headgear.
The union grieved the policy, noting that the collective agreement required
Gerdau to take all reasonable precautions for the safety of employees — in line
with health and safety legislation — and to provide all personal protective
equipment prescribed by the joint health and safety committee. The union argued
this gave the power to approve safety equipment to the joint committee, not the
company.
The
arbitrator found that the Ontario Occupational Health and Safety Act placed the
main responsibility for employee health and safety with the employer, including
the assigning of personal protective equipment. This legal responsibility did
not diminish with the existence of a joint health and safety committee and a
collective agreement allowing the committee to recommend safety equipment, said
the arbitrator. If the employer didn’t have the ability to dictate equipment,
then it would be susceptible to being charged and prosecuted for safety
conditions over which it had no control.
The
arbitrator ruled that Gerdau was entitled to prescribe personal protective
equipment for employees, independent of the joint health and safety committee,
regardless of the collective agreement provision giving the committee a say in
prescribing equipment. The greivance was dimissed.
“Although
I do not doubt this union’s commitment to the safety of its members, I do not
believe that the employer can avoid its legal obligation, even when acting in
good faith, to take every precaution reasonable in the circumstances for theprotection of a worker,” said the arbitrator.
For more
information see:
•Gerdau Ameristeel v. U.S.W.,
Local 6571, 2012
CarswellOnt 9066 (Ont. Arb. Bd.).
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http://www.employmentlawtoday.com/articleview/16594-safety-is-ultimately-employers-responsibility-not-committees-arbitrator
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