“Whether you’re making food products, furniture, sheet metal, or anything else, if you work in the manufacturing industry you will be exposed to the hazards of machinery or equipment with moving parts. Loose clothing, gloves, jewellery, and long hair can get caught in moving parts and cause serious injury or death,” reads this new safety alert.
Author Archives: Susan
Most of us know the importance of using sunscreen at work and play. But do you know how different types of sunscreens work?
In BC, a hospitality worker died after falling 17 feet from a ladder while checking a smoke detector located at the top of a vaulted ceiling in a loft apartment. I read about this tragedy on the new Ladder Safety Portal from WorkSafeBC.
Each year, on average, 13 kids are killed on Canada’s farms – and that’s why the Canadian Agriculture Safety Association is reaching out to communities throughout the country. CASA announced 13,500+ kids and participants will take part in the activities organized by safety groups in Canada’s rural communities
A supervisor sends home a hungover worker and doesn’t report it. He’s trying to be compassionate, but chances are he’s causing more harm than good in the long run. This online course – Supervising the Drug-free Workplace – offers solutions that keep everyone safer.
Consider the similarities. Both Twitter and CB radio use brief, to-the-point comments and allow people to connect from remote places. You communicate with people you don’t know and form remote relationships – via radio or the Internet – with people you’ve never met in real life.
Home in one piece: What motivates you, your friends, or your family to come home safely from work? That was the 2012 theme for the seventh annual WorkSafeBC Student Video Contest – which generated 66 YouTube entries, representing the work of 195 students from 135 schools.
Young workers in BC share stories on Facebook and enter to win an iPad
“Where would you like to see a BC HighwayCam in our province to better help you know before you go?” An important question indeed – for working drivers and the public – and throughout June it was TranBC’s monthly survey question.
A new BC report finds women between 55 than 64 years old are three times more likely to experience a severe fall than women 15 to 24 years old – and women working in health care are three to four times more likely to incur a serious injury as men in that industry.