Showing posts with label shift work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label shift work. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 9, 2018

Research: Family impact of mobility

The Vanier Institute recently published an article about the impact of work-related mobility on family life. The study looked at workers who commuted more than an hour a day and workers whose jobs required them to move from place-to-place during the day.

Among the findings is that there were significant effects on workers of unpaid idle time (e.g., time spent waiting for work that was not paid). Examples include caregivers who were waiting between client visits or shift workers who must arrive early for a shift due to poor public transportation alignment with their schedules. This time represented a cost transferred from employers to workers (in the form of time stolen from family responsibilities) by the mobile nature of the job.

The time pressures that mobility intensifies were also found to negatively affect the well being of workers. Effects included exhaustion, stress, and social isolation. The lack of alignment between non-standard work hours and child-care formed an additional burden that was felt particularly acutely by female workers.

-- Bob Barnetson

Friday, June 8, 2018

Labour & Pop Culture: Welcome to the Boomtown

This week’s installment of Labour & Pop Culture is “Welcome to the Boomtown” by David & David. The song recounts the mid-80s excess found in Los Angeles and how a boomtown plays out for the rich and for the poor.

Alberta is no stranger to booms and busts and there is interesting research going on about how this affects labour. For example, foreign live-in caregivers (more commonly known as “nannies”) play an important role in the economy of Fort McMurray. Their often-grueling conditions of work allow their employers to meet the demands of their own employers.

Sara Dorow (from the U of A) and her colleagues have been studying this phenomenon. They note that the boom entails a cascading of social reproductive costs onto this vulnerable group. That is to say, the oil sands couldn’t function without these almost invisible workers managing home and hearth issues for workers. Yet these workers are often treated as disposable.

With the boom also comes the bust. Since 2014, Alberta has struggled economically. It appears that the worst of this recession is passing but the recovery is uneven.

For example, in a recent CBC article, U of C economist Trevor Tombe notes that the economic recovery Alberta is experiencing is evident in employment rates (which are bouncing back up. But as Tombe’s graph (below) shows, young men appear to be excluded from this recovery.


This pattern is understandable given that, in the past, young men could secure well paying jobs in the oil patch with not much more than a strong back. This employment strategy appears to no longer be as effective as it once was. One solution is to provide displaced workers with opportunities to return to school.



Ms. Cristina drives a 944
Satisfaction oozes from her pores
She keeps rings on her fingers

Marble on her floor, cocaine on her dresser
Bars on her doors, she keeps her back against the wall
She keeps her back against the wall

So I say, I say welcome, welcome to the Boomtown
Pick a habit, we got plenty to go around
Welcome, welcome to the Boomtown
All that money makes such a succulent sound
Welcome to the Boomtown

Handsome Kevin got a little off track
Took a year off of college and he never went back
Now he smokes too much, he's got a permanent hack

Deals dope out of Denny's, keeps a table in the back
He always listens to the ground
Always listens to the ground

So I say, I say welcome, welcome to the Boomtown
Pick a habit, we got plenty to go around
Welcome, welcome to the Boomtown
All that money makes such a succulent sound
Welcome to the Boomtown

Well, the ambulance arrived too late
I guess, she didn't want to wait

-- Bob Barnetson

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Research: Cannabis on workplace injury

In June of 2018, the federal government is expected to legalize pot. Many employers have, in the past, expressed concern about the safety effects of drug use in the workplace. And there is ongoing litigation about mandatory random drug testing at a worksite in Fort McMurray.

The Institute for Work and Health has very helpfully posted some preliminary information about the state of research on the effects of cannabis on work safety. IWH researchers do high-quality work and are currently doing a systematic review of the research on the effects of various drugs on workplace injuries, deaths and near misses.

While the review has not yet been completed, the authors have shared some preliminary findings:

1. There are no published studies on the effects of legalized recreational cannabis on workplace outcomes. This is important because employers must typically demonstrate some minimal level of proof to support policies such as random drug testing.

2. The broader evidence of cannabis use on workplace outcomes (e.g., attendance, turnover, injuries) is highly conflicted and no conclusions can yet be drawn. This suggests that the popular perception of pot as problematic may be incorrect. There is also no data about the incidence of workplace cannabis use.

3. The evidence on cannabis use in safety sensitive positions is mostly based on studies of driving behaviours. Extrapolating these studies to other safety-sensitive jobs is likely analytical over-reach.

4. Cannabis-use testing does not establish impairment (whereas testing for alcohol can do so). This poses a major barrier to research and practice.

This kind of research is helpful because it demonstrates that the current state of knowledge about the workplace effects of legalizing dope is very limited.

This is not all that different from what we know about other forms of drug use in the workplace. The short of that is that there is little evidence linking drug use (as distinct from alcohol use) to increased injury rates (which surprised me) and there is little evidence suggesting that random testing reduces injury rates (less surprising if there is no relationship between drug use and injury to begin with).

That absence of evidence has not stopped employers from advancing mandatory drug testing policies (which workers and unions have resisted). You can read about a 2012 dust-up on this issue here.

Employers typically argue that, despite the lack of evidence to support their policies, they have an obligation to ensure workplace safety and, thus, they have to do something. Setting aside their assumption that there is a problem (which the evidence suggests there isn’t), the idea that employers ought to act to make workplaces safer based only on suspicion of harm is an interesting one.

This approach resonates with the precautionary principle in occupational health and safety, which states that, where an employer believes that a workplace substance or process may cause harm, then it should be up to the person advocating for the substance or process to prove it does not cause harm.

Interestingly, employers have generally resisted the precautionary principle when it might apply to the potentially toxic substances or process they choose to expose workers to. Given this, that they suddenly (and narrowly) laud the precautionary principle around drug testing ought to be viewed with suspicion.

If employers are truly motivated to make workplaces safer, then they ought to be come to the table and make a trade: workers might agree to having their privacy breached if, in exchange, the employer agreed to imposing the same standard on the substances and processes (e.g., shift work) that they subject workers to.

I’ll believe that when I see it.

-- Bob Barnetson

PS. Although it is irrelevant to the argument I’ve presented above, please note that (1) I don’t use pot, (2) I have never used recreational drugs (in 1989, I had 10 narcotic-based painkillers prescribed for a tooth absence but that was not recreational!), and (3) I’m pretty ambivalent about legalization. I disclose this to forestall the (shitty) arguments that arose that last time I wrote on this subject essentially accusing me of using my position to advance my own (presumably wild!) drug use.

Friday, November 17, 2017

Labour & Pop Culture: Supply and Demand

This week’s installment of Labour & Pop Culture is “Supply and Demand” by Amos Lee. The song is about the tendency of people to construct their lives around their occupations and the impact this has on them. For example, a study out of Ohio found women working more than 60 hours per week had triple the risk of life threatening illnesses.

The message of the song is that:
Somethin' gotta give with the way I'm livin'
Seems I'm gettin' down everyday
The more I strive, the less I'm alive
And seems I'm gettin' further away

Yeah baby I need a plan to understand
That life ain't only supply and demand
The sentiment here is fine and all, but I wonder if the notion that self-reflection is a cure-all for over work is a bit facile. Certainly becoming aware that we’re working too much and might better spend our time doing other things is nice.

But there are lots of concrete reasons people work more that they’d like, such as declining real-dollar wages, a lack of permanent jobs, and growing economic insecurity. Pop culture—which is embedded in a capitalist economy—rarely problematizes the structural outcomes of capitalism.

Instead, it tends to individualize responsibility. Like this song suggesting workers need to change their behaviour. I’m sure the warehouse guy in this video would like to work less:
Well your wife and your baby you tell them yeah well maybe
I'll meet y'all at a weekend resort
Put your eyes on the prize and you can realize
Your little girl's life's so short
But can he? And what kind of profound political and economic change would be required for a manual labourer to earn a living wage?

There doesn’t appear to be an official video for this song so I found this fan-made video. Note the lip-syncer is not Amos Lee.



Somethin' gotta give with the way I'm livin'
Seems I'm gettin' down everyday
The more I strive, the less I'm alive
And seems i'm gettin' further away

Oh well all my superstitions and my crazy suspicions
Of the people that I care about
I been doin' more screamin' than I been doin' dreamin'
And I think it's time I figured it out

Yeah baby I need a plan to understand
That life ain't only supply and demand

I been goin' joggin' in the park after dark
Draggin' 'round with me my ball and chain
Took southern skies to make me realize
That I'm causin' myself this pain

The woman that I'm lovin' yeah I'm pushin' and shovin'
Getting further on by the day
And I can't understand how the heart of this man
Ever let it end up this way

Yeah baby I need a plan to understand
That life ain't only supply and demand

When the road gets dark and lonesome dear
You can find me here
But honey you don't know where I am
You need a friieend yeeaahh

Life ain't easy in fact I know it's sleazy
When you're the big man in town
Shakin' religions and makin' decisions
You never get slow on down

Well your wife and your baby you tell them yeah well maybe
I'll meet y'all at a weekend resort
Put your eyes on the prize and you can realize
Your little girl's life's so short

Brother you need a plan to understand
That life ain't only supply and demand
Yeah sister you need a plan to understand
That life ain't only supply and demand

Hey, you better figure it out now
You know you ain't comin' back down, yeah
You better figure it out now
You know you ain't comin' back down

-- Bob Barnetson

Tuesday, November 14, 2017

BC report highlights rampant wage theft, broken system

The BC Employment Standards Coalition released a report this summer entitled “Workers stories of exploitation and abuse: Why BC Employment Standards needs to change.” BC’s laws governing the terms and conditions of use had been significantly degraded through legislative and regulatory change by the former Liberal government.

The report tells the stories of 145 BC workers whose employers violated their rights or made their lives difficult because BC workers lack certain rights. The most common issues flagged included wage theft (e.g., improper pay, no OT, improper termination, illegal deductions), abusive and unhealthy workplaces (e.g., discrimination, harassment), and scheduling violations (e.g., no breaks, long hours, reduced hours, compulsory OT, scheduling changes).

The stories of wage theft are the ones that will resonate the most with readers. While some stories are of straight up non-payment, it is subtler forms of time and wage-premium theft that the most common:
Brad is a delivery drive and glass installer for a national auto glass company. He stated that because of a significant workload increase, he and his co-workers must start work 20 to 30 minutes early every day without pay. They also have to forego coffee and lunch breaks in order to complete their daily assignments.

John worked in a professional office and was not being paid for overtime. He was given more work than could be handled during normal hours and was expected to stay late to finish it. He was given a company cell phone and expected to be available 24/7. While on vacation, John completed eight hours of unpaid work using a laptop computer that he was asked by his employer to take with him.

Megan is a software developer for an engineering company. When she works overtime, she only gets paid her regular rate of pay. Alternately, she can choose to bank overtime for days off, hour for hour. Megan’s employer also requires her to be available for work at all times, but she is not paid for being on-call. She has reported for work within four hours of a call but only been paid two hours for the call-in. She does not receive overtime pay while working on-call during a weekend. Megan raised the issue of on-call and overtime pay with her employer, but was told there is no overtime pay for extra hours or for on-call extra hours.

Mel is a delivery driver for a retail and wholesale meat company. He reported that all of the employees at his company are “treated like shit” and expected to work for free after the 4 p.m. quitting time. Mel refuses to work overtime for free, but his co-workers regularly stay late without compensation (some of them work from 5 a.m. to 8 p.m. without overtime pay).

Mel is familiar with the ESB website but decided the process of filing a complaint was “not worth it,” and that he would not want to sit down with his employer to discuss his complaint. Mel thinks the process should change. (p. 26)
BC’s rules around child labour have been even worse than Alberta’s and the result has been serious injury to young workers:
Justin was 12 when he started a job at an auto salvage company. On his first day, he was stacking car batteries and battery acid spilled on him, soaking through his clothes and burning his chest. He received no medical treatment on the worksite and was told to keep working. He still has scars on his chest from the acid burns.

Cara has permanent disabilities in her back and wrists from working with animals when she was 13. Cara’s employer blamed her for incurring injuries and promptly fired her. When Cara’s mother complained, the employer paid Cara some compensation for the injuries. However, Cara was not rehired and the employer never filed an injury report. Four years later, Cara still has debilitating pain and avoids using one of her hands.

Cory was 13 when he started working. He was hired to work construction cleanup at ap- proximately 35 hours per week. Though the law requires an employer to obtain a letter of permission from a parent before hiring someone under the age of 15, Cory’s parents weren’t asked for such a letter. Corey was promised a video game as payment, which he never received. On one occasion, he fell through scaffolding and landed one story below. Corey’s boss offered him a beer. He was in pain for about a week, and no WorkSafeBC accident report was filed. (p. 32)
The stories of temporary foreign workers employed on farms and as domestics are also worth a read. Finally, the report touches on how worker-hostile the employment standards claim process is in BC:
Bianca was a manager in the kitchen operated by Compass Canada at Hudson’s Bay. Her employer was not paying her for all the hours she worked, nor were they paying her over- time pay. She raised the issue many times with her employer but was told not to worry and that she would be looked after. Bianca finally quit and filed a complaint with ESB. She was required to participate by phone in a mediation with her employer and an ESB officer. Bianca’s employer kept giving “low ball” offers to try to get her to settle. When she did not accept any of the offers, the officer told her she should settle and stop wasting everyone’s time. Bianca refused to settle and a hearing was scheduled.

The employer did not show up for the first hearing date. At the second hearing, the employer did not bring the paperwork they had been asked to bring. During the proceedings, the officer treated Bianca with disrespect. He often turned his back on her, and referred to her, when speaking with the employer, as “she” and “her,” but never by name. The officer got into arguments with the complainant. She was finally pressured into settling for less than what was owed to her. It took months to reach this settlement. “After the hearing I went outside and cried,” said Bianca. “I was so intimidated and furious and disappointed with how I was treated.”

“I would tell people not to bother filing an employment standards complaint unless they have a lawyer,” said Bianca, when asked for advice to give other workers. “They will just end up frustrated and even more angry. The system is not made for solving violations. The self-help kit is designed to intimidate people and it is difficult to understand.” (p. 51).
It is worth noting that “Since 2000/2001, the number of branch offices has been reduced from 17 to 9 (a 47 per cent reduction), and the total number of branch staff has been reduced from148 to 74 (a 50 per cent reduction). At the same time, total employment in BC has increased by 23 per cent, and the number of establishments with employees has increased by 25 per cent.” (p. 53)

Overall, the report suggests three things: (1) BC’s Employment Standards are inadequate, (2) what standards there are routinely violated by employers to minimize labour costs, and (3) BC does a very poor job of enforcing the standards. An open question is whether BC’s recently elected New Democratic government will do anything meaningful about it.

-- Bob Barnetson

Friday, September 16, 2016

Labour & Pop Culture: Superstore

This week’s installment of Labour & Pop Culture is not a song. Instead, I’m going to plump for the sit-com “Superstore” that premiers its second season on Thursday, September 22 on NBC.

Superstore follows the adventures of workers in Cloud 9, a big box store where employees have to say "Have a heavenly day" to customers but otherwise can't discuss religion in the workplace.

There have been lots of shows set in workplaces (e.g., The Office, WKRP). What sets Superstore apart is its very clear commentary on the precarious and crappy employment conditions that its characters face and how they cope with them.

The first season (available on iTunes) starts out a bit uneven, with newcomer Jonah trying to fit in with various veteran workers. The sight gags in the first few episodes are funny. As the characters start to get established, attention shifts to some fairly typical corporate HR practices (e.g., corporate magazine profiles, racist job assignments, internal sales competitions, secret shoppers, anti-union animus). More interesting is how these practices lead to disengagement, cynicism and (strangely) Stockholm-syndrome behaviours.

The season finale (episode 11—short first season) sees the workers accidentally trigger corporate panic over the possibility of a union. The real issue is the workers want maternity leave for one of their coworkers who is otherwise planning on giving birth in the store because she needs the shift. The resulting union avoidance techniques actually catalyzes the workers to strike (and one scab seizes the opportunity to curry favour and advance her career).

Overall, this is pretty sharp (and socially critical) writing for network television and the second season appears to pick up with a strike.

-- Bob Barnetson



Friday, July 1, 2016

Labour & Pop Culture: The Factory

This week’s installment of Labour & Pop Culture of “The Factory” by Warren Zevon (yes, the Werewolf of London guy. Zevon has written a number of songs about class and labour; this one is from the late 1980s.

There are a lot of themes in this song. Zevon touches on the need to have a job (“We got a kid that's two, we got another one due”) and the hierarchical nature of employment in a factory (“Saying, ‘Yes sir, no sir, yes sir, no sir/Yes sir, no sir, work’”).

He also talks about the intergenerational nature of social class:
I was born in Mechanicsburg
My Daddy worked for Pontiac 'til he got hurt
Now he's on disability
And I got his old job in the factory
And he touches on the health effects of work—not just the risk of physical injury (which is presumably what happened to the singer’s father) but the more insidious health effects of chemical exposures (e.g., asbestos, polyvinyl chloride). Interestingly, Zevon was diagnosed (and died from) mesothelioma (an asbestos-related cancer) about 15 years after he wrote this song.
Kickin' asbestos in the factory
Punchin' out Chryslers in the factory
Breathin' that plastic in the factory
Makin' polyvinyl chloride in the factory
Finally, Zevon notes the grind of the factory regime: up early every day and long work weeks. Overall, the song is a teacher’s dream.



I was born in '63
Got a little job in the factory
I don't know much about Kennedy
I was too busy working in the factory

We got a kid that's two, we got another one due
We get by the best we can do
The factory's got a good medical plan
And cousin, I'm a union man
Saying, "Yes sir, no sir, yes sir, no sir
Yes sir, no sir, work"

I was born in Mechanicsburg
My Daddy worked for Pontiac 'til he got hurt
Now he's on disability
And I got his old job in the factory
Saying, "Yes sir, no sir, yes sir, no sir
Yes sir, no sir, work"

Early in the morning I feel a chill
The factory whistle blows loud and shrill
I'd kill my wife or she'd kill me
But we gotta go to work in the factory

Six days a week at the factory
Up early in the morning at the factory
I've been working in the factory
Johnny, I've been working in the factory

Kickin' asbestos in the factory
Punchin' out Chryslers in the factory
Breathin' that plastic in the factory
Makin' polyvinyl chloride in the factory

-- Bob Barnetson

Friday, March 4, 2016

Labour & Pop Culture: Speed Up

This week’s installment of Labour & Pop Culture is Maria Dunn’s “Speed Up”, a folk song about work in Edmonton’s (now defunct) GWG clothing factory. The Royal Alberta Museum has a brief overview of the history of the factory, one that largely ignores the effect of automation on the workers and only tangentially touches upon the workers’ experiences as immigrants and union members.

By contrast, the Aspen Foundation for Labour Education has built a very interesting curriculum around the GWG experience for social studies teachers. This includes a recording of an hour-long performance that combines video of GWG workers with the Sings of Maria Dunn. https://youtu.be/NvRJ3HCa0N8

“Speed up” is one of the songs from the production. The most interesting part (lyrically) of the song is how the worker understands that the employer is constantly increasing the pace of work:
Now that I’ve gotten good and fast
They’ve upped the ante for my task
Yet the worker accepts this (perhaps because she has no choice) as the price of getting by and building a better future for her children:
Come weekend, it’s another race
Another job, another pace
Each dollar more a saving grace
To bring my family to this place


I’ll tell you how the work went – speedup, speedup, speedup
Not one second was misspent – speedup, speedup, speedup
My fingers nimble, face intent – speedup, speedup, speedup
I’d like to see you try it friend – speedup, speedup, speedup

Now that I’ve gotten good and fast
They’ve upped the ante for my task
Each time I get ahead, they’re back
To raise the bar and stretch the slack

Each extra inch seems like a mile
So bundles take a bit of guile
You snatch the small size with a smile
It’s “head down” for another while

Come weekend, it’s another race – keep up, keep up, keep up
Another job, another pace – keep up, keep up, keep up
Each dollar more a saving grace – keep up, keep up, keep up
To bring my family to this place – keep up, keep up, keep up

My husband, I—we’re healthy, young
Still, who knows what we’re running on
We pass each other the baton
When one comes home, the other’s gone

Sometimes I need a little cry
All I do’s just scraping by
For making friends, there’s little time
It’s “head down” for another while

Each pocket, seam and bottom hem
I’ve sewn for my children
I watch them grow and know for them
It’s worth it all in the end

-- Bob Barnetson

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

CP Rail dinged for worker fatigue

A student flagged this article for me about CP Rail getting dinged by federal safety regulators for work systems that result in worker fatigue. Basically scheduling issues means workers often can’t predict their work schedule (and thus adjust their sleeping scheduling) so often arrive at work fatigued. This creates imminent danger, says the Transport Canada Report.

As Jason Foster and I note in our forthcoming OHS textbook, fatigue is a legitimate health and safety concern because workers who are experiencing fatigue are more likely to be involved in workplace incidents. Research has shown that fatigue can impair judgment in a manner similar to alcohol. WorkSafeBC reports the following effects: 
  • 17 hours awake is equivalent to a blood alcohol content of 0.05 (legal limit in B.C. and Alberta) 
  • 21 hours awake is equivalent to a blood alcohol content of 0.08 (legal limit in Canada) 
  • 24-25 hours awake is equivalent to a blood alcohol content of 0.10
Most cases of fatigue are resolved through adequate sleep. The average person requires 7.5 to 8.5 hours of sleep a night (remember, this is an average – some require more, some less). While an employer cannot control how well a worker sleeps, they can adjust the workplace to militate against fatigue.

Shift scheduling is one of the most important administrative controls of fatigue: employers can ensure shifts are not too long and too close together as well as avoiding dramatic shift rotations. Employers can also ensure workplace temperatures are not too high, work is interesting and engaging without being too strenuous, and provide adequate opportunities for resting, eating, and sleeping (if necessary).

In the wake of this unprecedented regulatory action, CP has agreed to review shift scheduling but basically blames the workers and the union for it.
In a follow-up statement Monday, CP spokesman Martin Cej said, "Crews are not on call 24/7. Crews have significant and often unutilized opportunities to schedule rest. 
"CP has been taking steps to ensure crew members take more rest, but union collective agreements have been a barrier to change."
This explanation sits uneasily with the working conditions reported by workers:
He said a routine scenario could see him driving a train from his home community to another location between the hours of midnight and 6 a.m. but then having to wait 12 to 24 hours not knowing when he'll be assigned to drive a train back home.

"You get into your away- from-home terminal, say, at 6 a.m. in the morning. Then you go to bed, and you sleep until two o'clock in the afternoon. You get up. You're wondering when you're going to go back to work, And you look on your screen, and it's showing you not out of your away-from-home terminal now until midnight!" he said. 
That means he'll be awake for 10 hours before reporting for his next eight-hour shift, leaving him tired and, at times, nodding off at the train controls. 
"You're fatigued," he said. "You're done. Your brain is mush. You want to go to sleep. You're fighting constantly with your body. Your body is telling you one thing, but you know that on the other hand, you've got to get that train home … 150 miles of track."
One of the most interesting aspects of the CBC story is actually the correction printed at the bottom:
An earlier version of this story said CP was ordered to improve freight train scheduling. In fact, the Transport Canada order requires improvements to train line-ups, which allow employees to estimate when they'll be called to drive a train.
What this shows us is that, despite the imminent danger posed by fatigued crews, the government is only prepared to tell the employer to better communicate when the workers will work (so the workers can adjust their sleep scheduled). The government isn’t prepared to tell the employer to do a better job of scheduling trains to avoid lay overs that are often 20-hours.

This basically dumps the responsibility for being alert back on crews. In the example above, the worker would have be able to sleep (or otherwise rest) for 14- or 16-hours at a crew rest facility. That is better than the current situation (where the worker wouldn't know when to sleep longer), but it only addresses the proximate cause of fatigue (bad communication), not the root cause (bad scheduling).

-- Bob Barnetson

Friday, June 26, 2015

Friday Tunes: Assembly Line

This week’s installment of labour themes in popular culture is “Assembly Line” by Randy Montana. This was one of the song suggestions I crowd sourced from my facebook friends. 

One of my longer term research projects is a content analysis of songs about work and labour and this one sits squarely in the category I’m tentatively labeling “workin’ proud.” The interesting part of this song is that its simple lyrics provide a chronicle of blue-collar jobs from the perspective of a worker—identifying what is important and real to him or her.

Montana sings about tools (“Ratchet in my left and a flat head in my right’), the work process (“Just a hundred and thirty-two steps/Making machines out a steel and sweat”) and the working conditions (“Over and over again like a record that’s on repeat”). He also sings about workers’ place in the production process (“And I’m just one of a thousand parts”) and the repetition of this cycle, that stretches across workers’ lives (“Clocked out about 5 p.m./Wake up in the morning, do it all again”).



Punched in just about five
Ratchet in my left and a flat-head in my right
Hoping that I’ll hear about a raise by the end of the week
Just a hundred and thirty-two steps
Making machines out a steel and sweat
Over and over again like a record that’s on repeat

[Chorus]

And it’s all manufactured time
When you’re on the assembly line
Building products made to sell
Moving on a conveyer belt
And it’s a job for a diligent heart 
And I’m just one of a thousand parts
You might think I’ve got it rough but I don’t mind
Working on the assembly line

All day in steel-toed boots
Vacation days that I’ll never use
There’s a rumor going ‘round
that’s got nothing to do with me
Charlie swears he’s gonna quit
Put his two weeks in and that’s it
He’s been talkin’ that way since the summer of ‘93

[Chorus]

[Chorus]

It ain’t a job for everyone but it’s mine
Working on the assembly line
On the assembly line
Clocked out about 5 p.m.
Wake up in the morning, do it all again

-- Bob Barnetson

Monday, March 10, 2014

Alberta's Employment Standards Review

A week or so ago, the government announced it would be soliciting feedback on the Employment Standards Code. You can fill-in a survey or make a written submission. Below is the submission I made to Minister of Jobs, Skills, Training and Labour Thomas Lukaszuk:

7 March 2014

Minister Lukaszuk:

Thank you for the opportunity to provide feedback on Alberta’s Employment Standards Code.

Enforcement
While this review appears to centre on legislative change, the most pressing issue in contemporary employment standards is the enforcement (or, more accurately, the non-enforcement) of these standards. Alberta relies primarily on complaints to trigger enforcement. Unfortunately, it is widely accepted that complaint-driven enforcement reveals only a minority of violations (Thomas 2009, Arthurs 2006, Ontario 2004, Adams 1987).

There are a number of reasons for the ineffectiveness of complaint-based enforcement. Workers may choose not to complain based on fear of employment repercussions, ignorance, a lack of self-efficacy, and/or the belief that there is little hope of effective remedy (Weil and Pyles 2005). The effect of relying on complaint-based enforcement is that is creates a culture of noncompliance, wherein workers will complain less even as violations increase (Weil 2012).

It is difficult to know the true rate of employer non-compliance in Alberta because your department does a poor job of reporting employment standards statistics. Where there is data available (typically from opposition party FOIP requests) it shows a high degree of non-compliance. For example, March 2009 data about (the seemingly now defunct) targeted inspections of employers employing temporary foreign workers found 56% of employers in 363 workplaces were in contravention of the Code. Over $1.3m in unpaid wages were returned to these workers (Alberta 2009). January 2010 data on 325 inspections shows non-compliance to be at an astounding 74% (Alberta 2010).

Clearly there is a widespread problem with non-compliance. While you have previous characterizes this data as a “really good news story” (CBC 2010), presumably because it suggests that some workers do complain, if you actually look at your data, you will note that only a minority of the violations found came from complaints. This suggests that non-reporting of employer wage theft (and other employment standards violations) is a significant issue that complaint-based enforcement does not effectively address.

While legislative change (see below) may offer some improvement, the fundamental enforcement issues are two:
  1. There are not enough employment standards inspectors to cover even a fraction of Alberta’s 140,000-odd employers. Effectively, there is no chance an employer will get caught violating the Employment Standards Code.
  2. Should an employer get caught violating the Employment Standards Code, the only likely penalty is having to pay back some portion (but likely not all—see below) of any wages found owing (plus a small surcharge to the government).
The government virtually never prosecutes violators. The successful prosecution I can think of was Domo Gas in 2002 or 2003—maybe there was a more recent one from Klondike Days? And indeed, non-monetary violations (e.g., illegal child employment, excessive hours) are “remedied” with an order to stop the behaviour (but not other penalty). In these circumstances, is it any wonder that non-compliance is rampant? The solution is (1) more inspectors and (2) real penalties for non-compliance.

Child Labour
Alberta presently allows adolescents (12-14) to work in four jobs (delivery of small wares, office clerk or messenger, retail store clerk, newspaper or flyer delivery) as well as any job approved by the Director of Employment Standards. At present, certain jobs in the restaurant or food services industry are considered “approved” occupations (basically anything except cutty, burny, boozy work), contingent upon parental permission and a completion of hazard checklist. Your consultation document floats the idea of expanding the list of named jobs in the legislation to include limited retail sales, limited restaurants and food services, light cleaning or janitorial, and movie theatre ushers and cleaners.

It is important to recognize that Alberta employers frequently violate the existing rules regulating the employment of adolescents. It is difficult to tell how widespread the issue is because your department has not released data on, for example, its targeted inspections program for young workers (which I understand has been discontinued). There is some analogous data on occupational health and safety violations from a 2011 inspection blitz that suggests 69% of employers had exposed workers between ages 15 and 24 to safety violations even though they knew inspectors were coming out (Alberta 2011a). Perhaps your department has some data it could release to clarify rates of illegal child labour from random inspections?

There is some non-governmental data on this point (Barnetson 2009, 2010). In the past, you have, rather cavalierly, dismissed this data instead of looking into it (Alberta 2011b). More recent research further substantiates these concerns about illegality (Barnetson 2013a, 2013b). For example, data from the 2012/13 suggests 44.4% of employed adolescents surveyed were in occupations of questionable legality and 25.4% were in clearly illegal occupations (Barnetson 2013b). This level of illegality is likely related to the non-enforcement of employment standards and potentially jeopardizes the physical, intellectual and moral development of adolescents (which is the rationale for regulation as set out in the Employment Standards Code).

This concern about the negative impact of work is more than merely handwringing. In 2012/13, 52.9% of employed adolescents surveyed reported at least one work-related injury in the previous year and the majority of those reporting injuries reported multiple forms of injury (Barnetson, 2013b). These included lacerations, sprains, bruises, burns, fractures, and chemical or biological exposures causing injury. Reporting (to parents, employers or the WCB) ran at roughly 50%. Here are some of adolescents’ comments about their employment from several years of data:

  • I got eczema due to the chemicals they use to wash tables. (14-year-old female) 
  • We had to move the really big pigs to other units. That was tough work. We could easily have gotten trapped and run down from the pigs. (14-year-old male) 
  • I had a 60 some year old guy come into the carwash and I helped him and once he was paying and walking out he said “Thank you.” I said “you’re welcome.” He then surprised me and said “I could help you pull down your pants.” (14-year-old female) 
  • My employer didn’t pay me on time (and) failed to give me or my coworkers breaks. (14-year-old female)
  • Nail gun to the foot. (13-year-old male)
  • I work at my grampa’s farm and workplace. I was too young to use big equipment. (12-year-old male) 
  • I quit because my supervisors were drinking on the job and leaving me to work the kitchen which I wasn’t legally allowed to be in. (grade-10 female)
  • We had no gloves for pulling out poison ivy. (13-year-old male)
  • I fell off a ladder, twisted my ankle pretty bad. But my boss didn’t do anything. (14-year-old female)
  • I got told by an employee that everyone does drugs and if I told anyone I would not be allowed to work there in future. (14-year-old female)
  • I got knocked out by a t-bar lift. (14-year-old male)
  • I got attacked by a dog. (12-year-old)
  • When I do my paper route there is a man who is always following and watching me. I went to the (employer) and asked for a different route. (12-year-old male)
  • I was at work and one of the older men followed me to the washroom and tickled me then reached up under my shirt and grabbed my boob. I did nothing because I was only nine, so who would have listened to me. (16-year-old female).
While many people view adolescent employment as character building, it is important to recognize employment also entails exposing adolescents to a variety of hazards. Your suggestion that the Employment Standards Code could be amended to include limited work in restaurant and food services, light cleaning or janitorial work and work as movie theatre ushers and cleaners is deeply concerning and ought to be avoided.

Adolescents can presently perform limited duties in restaurants, contingent upon the employer obtaining and filing with the department parental consent forms and hazard checklists. Moving this work to the list of permitted occupations in the Code would eliminate the need for parental consent and the hazard checklist. My research on teenage workers leads me to believe that (1) that few employers acquire or file these documents and (2) your department does nothing with them. That said, employer non-compliance is no basis upon which to eliminate this requirement; indeed, it suggests the need for greater vigilance and enforcement by the government. Why would you loosen the laws when employers are demonstrably non-compliant with them?

Light cleaning and janitorial services expose adolescents to a host of new workplace hazards. These include physical hazards (e.g., heavy lifting, repetitive motions, slippery surfaces) as well as chemical and biological hazards. While the proposed wording suggests the work would be limited to “light” duties, many of these hazards exist in so-called light cleaning. Further, the absence of enforcement of employment standards means that many employers will likely ignore that “light” nature of the work. Not to put too fine of a point on this, but how are you going to feel when the first kid is discovered asphyxiated in the janitorial closet of a theatre or nursing home after s/he mixes bleach and Mr. Clean and produces mustard gas because you loosened the rules on child labour?

If you were looking to make meaningful change in the employment of adolescents and young people, you could (1) actually enforce the existing law and (2) increase the minimum age of employment from 12 to 13. During the last consultation on the Employment Standards Code in 2005, 56.5 per cent of employers and 50.2 per cent of employees believe that 12-year-olds were too young to be employed.

Work Permits 
Permitting means an unelected official (the Director of Employment Standards) can allow an employer to offer employment terms and conditions worse than the minimum terms and conditions of employment established by the legislature. There is no need for this (shouldn’t minimums apply to everyone?). It also places the Director of Employment Standards in a difficult position: s/he must balance the public interest in uniform minimums with political pressure that well connected employers may exert (or potentially exert) to the detriment of the Director’s career. Why would you allow such a situation to continue?

Internships
The current definition of employee is someone who receives or is entitled to receive a wage. This definition allows employers to have work done by interns, whose lack of a wage means they fall outside the ambit of the Code. This creates a significant opportunity for exploitation in cases where an internship is viewed as a stepping stone to subsequent employment. For example, an unpaid St. Albert intern died as a result of a motor vehicle accident that appears to have been caused by working 16-hour shifts at a local radio station (CBC 2013). While this case falls in the federal jurisdiction, Alberta’s laws would permit this same tragedy. Altering the scope of the Employment Standards Code such that it applies to unpaid internships seems like a decent thing to do.

Hours of Work and Breaks
At present, the Employment Standards Code permits workdays as long as 12 hours with 30-minute rest breaks after each 5 hours and overtime pay due after 8 hours. From a workers’ perspective, these minimums are awful. Now “awful” is a pretty subjective term so allow me to propose an experiment that would allow you to draw your own conclusion.
  1. Do hard labour for five hours. Twitter fights and chicken dinners don’t count. Maybe dig a ditch. Or wait tables in high heels (please tweet pictures of this… but only during your breaks). 
  2. Take a 30-minutes to pee and eat and rest (if your employer lets you). 
  3. Then work another 5 hours. 
  4. Then take another 30 minutes to yourself. 
  5. Now work another hour (which brings you to 12 hours).
How are your feet and back feeling? Ready to go home and make dinner for the kids? Then back to do it again tomorrow? And the next day? And the day after that?

Since you earned the minimum wage of $9.95 (but not for the breaks—they were unpaid) you brought home (before deductions but including some OT) a whole $125 (assuming there were no illegal deductions). What a deal! Good thing you are too tired to take the kids to dance or soccer, because you can’t afford that anyhow.

If you look at, say, Ontario, they limit work to eight hours in a day (except in unusual circumstances). They also give workers a period of at least 8 hours between shifts and 11 consecutive hours off work each day (applicable when workers work split shifts). This radically reduces the amount of overtime workers can be compelled to work by their employer. There are good public policy reasons for limiting the normal hours of work to eight (e.g., health and safety, family responsibilities, community contributions). The only reason to allow longer hours is to allow employers to avoid hiring more staff and save some money.

Leaves
It seems to me that the Employment Standards Code is designed to simplify the lives of employees and employers by outlining clear requirements and providing an easily accessible avenue by which to resolve disputes about them. If that is the case, then the Code should provide for leaves when such leaves are involuntary (e.g., jury duty) or when the employer is obligated via another piece of legislation to accommodate the worker (e.g., human rights obligation to accommodate illness). Make it clear so there are no misunderstandings.

General Holidays and Pay
Have a look at the flow chart here and tell me this couldn’t be a bit simpler. One way to simplify it is to eliminate the “employee eligibility” requirements. In addition to working for 30 days or more before the general holiday, the Code currently requires workers to work their scheduled shift before and after a general holiday in order to be eligible for general holiday pay.

The most likely explanation for this requirement is that the government was seeking to help employers discipline workers who might be inclined to extend their time away from work by not reporting for a shift before or after the general holiday (those damned lazy workers…). Employers have a number of tools for addressing unexcused absenteeism. There is no need for government to buttress employer power in this regard. Eliminating these requirements would be a step towards simplifying this portion of the Code.

Domestic and Farm Workers
The Employment Standards Code and regulation include exclusions affecting domestic and farm and ranch workers. The Code excludes domestic employees from the provisions around hours of work, overtime, rest periods and days of rest. There is no good reason to deny these rights to domestic workers.

Should employers be allowed to force domestic workers to work longer than 12 hours in a day? Should employers not have to pay domestics overtime if they compel domestics to work longer than 8 hours in a day? Do domestics not need rest breaks—to pee or eat or just sit the hell down for a minute? Do domestics not deserve one day of rest each week?

Given that domestic workers are frequently non-citizens who rely upon their employer for their continued residency in Canada, are socially isolated and may face language barriers and thus are unlikely to complain about violations, its seems unfair to compound their vulnerability by giving them fewer rights than other workers.

Farm and ranch workers are excluded from statutory requirements around hours of work, overtime, vacations, child labour and minimum wage. I was disappointed you didn’t ask about including farm workers. There is no compelling reason for these exclusions except to help farmers—who are political important to your government’s (fading) re-election chances—save money.

Of particular concern is waiving the child labour provisions. In practice, this means that farmers can (and do) have 10-year-olds work with or around machinery, livestock and chemicals. Since Alberta also excludes farms and ranches from the ambit of its Occupational Health and Safety Act, this employment standards exclusion sanctions farmers exposing children to these well documented hazards for children on farms. Why would any government allow that to happen? I’d like to point you to an example of a child’s injury or death, but your government doesn’t investigate those.

Penalties
Increasing fines for non-compliance makes sense when continued levels of non-compliance (which do appear high) suggest that existing penalties are not acting as a deterrent.

Yet, is that the case here?

As I noted above, there is virtually no chance of employers getting caught and, when they are caught, they must only repay a portion (see below) of any wages incorrectly withheld. I cannot recall anyone being successfully prosecuted under the Employment Standards Code since Domo Gas in 2002 or 2003.

The lack of prosecution suggests the issue is not the level of the fines but, in fact, the government’s unwillingness to prosecute employers who violate the law. In this situation, progressive penalties are just window dressing: they make the government look tough on violators when it really just turns a blind eye to them.

An analogous situation is the creation of administrative fines and ticketing in OHS. While these penalties were enacted in October of 2013 and January of 2014 respectively, no penalties have yet been enacted. And, in a year with a near-record 188 fatalities, prosecutions (five in total) dropped to an all-time low. It seems to me that the solution here is not legislative change, but actually enforcing the legislation you enacted.

Appeals
There is unevenness in how the Employment Standards Code handles appeals. Workers dissatisfied with a decision that they are not entitled to earnings or that a complaint is not accepted may appeal to the Director of Employment Standards (s.88). The Director’s decision is final. Yet an employer that is served with an order to pay wages is entitled to appeal to an umpire (in practice, a provincial court judge). There is no clear reason for allowing an employer to access to an independent appeal body on a wage issue while workers are limited to asking the Director of the unit that made the decision to review it.

Recovery of Earnings
It is broadly accepted that the majority of wage theft complaints are made by workers whose employment has been terminated (Arthurs 2006, Adams 1987). This reflects worker fear of repercussions if they complain about wage theft while they are employed. Sure, retaliation is illegal. But workers aren’t dumb: they know the government won’t do anything about that so they leave wage theft to be resolved after they quit or are fired.

Section 90 of the Code imposes a number of time limitations on the recovery of wages that are unfair to workers. Specifically, there is a one-year limit on orders. Further, orders on unpaid wages may only go 6 months from the date of termination or the date of the order (whichever comes first).

In practice, what this means is that, if I quit and complain, the order can only go back 6 months from the date I quit, even though the employer may well have cheated me out of overtime for three years. That hardly seems fair or consistent with the notion that there a minimum terms and conditions of employment.

On the other hand, if I complain while I’m still working for an employer, then the order can only go six months from the date of the order. Of course, orders only come after an investigation has been launched and the officer draws a conclusion. If my employer remedies the wage theft going forward from the date when the complaint is filed and then stalls the investigation, the employer is able to delay the issuance of an order. Each day of delay reduces the amount of money that I can recover because the six-month period does not crystallize until the order is issued. The simple solution here is (1) any dates should be from the date of complaint and (2) there should be no time limit on how far one can go back.

A review of your website indicates approximately 3700 open orders on unpaid wages (ranging from $22 to $211,921 in value). This suggests that there is significant scope for improvements in the recovery of unpaid wages. Whether this requires legislative change or simply much more aggressive application of the existing rules around director liability is unclear.

Conclusion
I’ll leave you with two thoughts. 

First, if you are truly reluctant to enforce the employment laws you passed (which is negligent and deceitful), you could simply make it easier for workers to join unions in Alberta. This would externalize the cost of enforcement in unionized workplaces to the unions via the grievance arbitration process. Since unionized workplace appear to also be safer than non-unionized workplaces, such a change might also reduce the number of injuries in Alberta each year.

Second, I’m currently doing interviews with academics and activists about Alberta’s child labour laws. Each of the seven experts I have interviewed has spontaneously volunteered that they expect the only thing that would motivate meaningful enforcement of Alberta’s child labours by your government is the death of one or more children while at work. I hope you will prove these experts wrong.

I hope you find this feedback helpful. If you would like to discuss any of these matters further, please feel free to contact me at barnetso@athabascau.ca .

Sincerely,

Bob Barnetson, PhD
Associate Professor of Labour Relations
Athabasca University

References

Adams, R. (1987). Employment standards in Ontario: An industrial relations systems analysis. Industrial relations/Relations industrielles. 42(4): 46-64.

Alberta. (2009). TFW Monthly Activity and Status Report, March 31, 2009.

Alberta. (2010). TFW Monthly Activity and Status Report, January 31, 2010.

Alberta. (2011a). Focused inspection project: Young workers. July 5, 2011. http://work.alberta.ca/documents/Focused-Inspection-Project-Young-Workers.pdf

Alberta. (2011b). 21 April 2011, Thomas Lukaszuk, PC. pp. 810-1.

Arthurs, H. (2006). Fairness at work: Federal labour standards for the 21st century. Ottawa: Labour Standards Review Commission.

Barnetson, B. (2009). The regulation of child and adolescent employment in Canada. Just labour 13: 29-47.
Barnetson, B. (2010). Effectiveness of complaint-driven regulation of child labour in Alberta. Just labour. 16: 9-24.
Barnetson, B. (2013a). Incidence of work and workplace injury among Alberta teens. Just labour. 20: 14-32.
Barnetson, B. (2013b). Incidence of work and workplace injury among Alberta teens, 2012/13. Edmonton: Alberta Workers Health Centre.

CBC. (2010, March 17). Temporary foreign workers treated poorly, NDP charges. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/temporary-foreign-workers-treated-poorly-ndp-charges-1.920847

CBC. (2013, September 9). Intern’s death after overnight shift sparks outcry. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/intern-s-death-after-overnight-shift-sparks-outcry-1.1704532

Ontario. (2004). Annual report of the Auditor General. Toronto, Auditor General.

Thomas, M. (2009). Regulating flexibility: The political economy of employment standards. Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press.

Weil, D. (2012). ‘Broken windows,” vulnerable workers and the future of worker representation. The Forum: Labour in American politics. 10(1): Article 9.

Weil, D. and Pyles, A. (2005). Why complain? Complaints, compliance and the problem of enforcement in the US workplace. Comparative labor law & policy journal. 27(1): 59-92.


Monday, May 10, 2010

Health Effects of Shift Work

Approximately one-quarter of Canadian workers are shift workers. Excluding occupations requiring 24-hour staffing (e.g., emergency services), shift work is a way for employers to maximize the use of machinery and other physical capital.

The Institute for Work and Health recently released a summary of its symposium on the health effects of shift work. A high-level briefing is available here. Among the more alarming impacts of shift work on workers are:

1. Shift work appears to elevate the risk of breast cancer and possibly colorectal cancer. There are some studies suggesting that shift work may also elevate the risk of preterm delivery, gastrointestinal disorders and mental health problems.

2. The level of workplace injury is higher among shift workers than among those who work regular shifts. This is particularly the case for shift workers working at night. Among the issues contributing to this is that government regulation (e.g., inspections) of workplaces tends to occur during week days.

It appears possible to mitigate these effects through scheduling changes that constrain shift-work during non-regular hours.

This discussion suggests that the organization of work is not solely a technical undertaking focused on optimizing production schedules. Rather the organization of work can have a significant effect on the health and safety of workers.

-- Bob Barnetson