Friday, March 9, 2007

Expert says deregulation in BC hurts farm safety.

The deregulation obviously hurt more than just safety as the government labor minister's response indicates. Deregulation meant that there is no more spot inspection of pay standards, exploitation etc. These workers are usually immigrants who know little about complaint mechanisms are not unionised and have little knowledge of their rights.


Deregulation hurt B.C. farm safety: expert
Last Updated: Friday, March 9, 2007 | 9:58 AM PT
CBC News
The safety of farm workers has been compromised by deregulation, says one of the authors of B.C.'s Employment Standards Act, which was passed in 1995 by the previous NDP government.

The Liberals amended the act after taking power in 2001 and also scrapped joint federal-provincial teams that conducted inspection blitzes of B.C. farms.

The van carrying 17 farm workers flipped onto the median in the Fraser Valley on Wednesday, killing three women.
(CBC) University of B.C. business professor Mark Thompson is speaking out against those decisions, in the wake of this week's crash that claimed the lives of three farm workers in a van accident in the Fraser Valley.

"I mean, they just stopped enforcing employment standards, basically. They made the complaint mechanism so cumbersome that workers are discouraged from using it."

The provincial government said it's too early to draw conclusions about the causes of the horrific crash, and that the changes to labour laws have not reduced farm worker safety.

Labour Minister Olga Ilich said the random inspection program was not focused on workers' safety.



"That was focused on rates of pay, terms of pay, whether or not workers were being exploited in so far as what they were being paid and the hours that they were working."

But Thompson said those teams spotted hundreds of violations, and in doing so, put pressure on employers.

"Those enforcement mechanisms put the contractors on notice that they were apt to be inspected, and I think that when the Campbell government stopped, that, I think, was a signal to farm labour contractors that they could go ahead as they wished."

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