What you need to know about Bill 70
If your workplace introduces a recognized management system to prevent injuries and illness, you could receive accreditation for your efforts under new legislation passed in December. The goal is to encourage superior health and safety performance by applying business methods already proven to boost quality and productivity.
This new opportunity appears in Schedule 16 of Bill 70, which defines a health and safety management system as a coordinated system of procedures, processes and other measures designed to promote continuous improvement in workplace health and safety.
Stephen Oakley, WSPS' director, corporate accounts and management systems, describes a management system this way: "Think of it in terms of your laptop's operating system. You can have a very effective joint health and safety committee or a good personal protective equipment program, but to succeed they have to nest within an overarching system, like the operating system on your laptop. This system, in turn, contributes to the organization's overall business planning and management processes."
How your workplace would benefit
Implementing a management system helps you improve organizational effectiveness by aligning health and safety with other business priorities, such as productivity and quality. The system helps you foresee risks and build in processes to address problems before they arise, explains Stephen. Employees will know what to do, when to do it, and how. This will bolster your prevention efforts, decreasing the likelihood of downgrading events such as accidents, injuries and the resulting disruption to your business, and allowing you to focus on improving the overall quality and delivery of your products and services.
But that's not all. Receiving accreditation for conformance with recognized standards can also help improve sales, customer satisfaction, corporate image, and market share. In many supply chains, quality standards have already become a fact of life. "They benefit your business, they don't hold it back," says Stephen.
What's next
Bill 70 authorizes the Ministry of Labour to establish accreditation standards and criteria. "One way to do this," suggests Stephen, "would be for the ministry to propose a basic framework that incorporates the fundamentals of all management systems, so that any established health and safety standard that has these ingredients would meet the ministry's requirements."
Think CSA-Z1000, OHSAS-18001, and the soon to be published ISO-45001. The Standards Council of Canada has already accepted CSA-Z1000 and OHSAS-18001, and will likely accept ISO-45001, which is expected to be published sometime in 2017.
Extensive ministry consultations with employers, organized labour, and other interest groups will also likely take place this year.