One of the arguments against the Bill 45 is that the
penalties unions face are entirely out of proportion with other penalties found in Alberta's employment laws.
For example, if there is an illegal strike over an unsafe
workplace, the union automatically gets hit with $250k in fines, $1m a day in
abatement costs, a three-month dues suspension plus individual members get fined
and union officers can be held civilly liable. Keep in mind that there have
been 2 illegal strikes since 2005, lasting a combined total of (I think) 5 days.
On the other hand, if an employer kills a worker, the
maximum fine they face under the Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) Act is
$500k. On average, there are 137 fatalities in Alberta workplaces each
year.
A deeper look
at Alberta’s OHS prosecution records suggests an even starker contrast: employers are unlikely
to be prosecuted if they kill a worker and they will get no where near the maximum fine.
The table below tracks prosecution numbers (not all are about
fatalities, but most are) and average penalties from 2005 to December 20, 2013.
The averages I calculated by hand from government data on the Human Services website. I’ve also thrown in the
number of compensable fatalities reported by the WCB each year (the underestimates fatalities but is the best data available).
OHS prosecutions in Alberta, 2005 to 2013
Year
|
Prosecutions
|
Average Penalty
|
Fatalities
|
2005
|
12
|
$46,000
|
143
|
2006
|
10
|
$153,000
|
123
|
2007
|
12
|
$143,000
|
154
|
2008
|
22
|
$231,000
|
166
|
2009
|
7
|
$65,000
|
110
|
2010
|
11
|
$157,000
|
136
|
2011
|
20
|
$172,000
|
123
|
2012
|
9
|
$404,000
|
145
|
2013
|
5
|
$488,000
|
n/a
|
What this data shows is that the number of occupational
fatalities has stayed roughly the same over time. Small numbers tend to vary
more year-to-year, but the long-term average is about 137 a year.
The number of prosecutions (while also variable) is trending
downwards over time. That is to say, employers are less likely to be prosecuted
for killing workers.
The dollar value of fines is trending upwards. But the big
jumps in 2012 and 2013 are a bit misleading—they are skewed because of the small number of prosecutions and for a few really big fines for incidents with multiple violations (which confuses both the numerator and denominator).
Looking at specific cases in 2012 and 2013, the average penalty for killing a worker in Alberta is now
between $200k and $300k ($275k was the most recent one I saw). Overall, this is
a disappointing record and shows that employers continue to face few and low
fines for killing workers.
-- Bob Barnetson
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