Farms.com Home   News

Alberta Government Farm Safety Bill Lacks Proper Consultation, Critics Say

Alberta’s NDP government is being accused of ramming through farm safety legislation without properly consulting the province’s farmers and ranchers.
 
Rural municipal politicians, farmers and the Wildrose official Opposition have complained about how the government has rolled out the pending bill, which would bring Alberta’s roughly 43,000 farms and ranches under occupational health and safety standards.
 
“This is probably one of the widest-sweeping pieces of legislation that will be affecting them in a generation and they would love to be able to make sure that their interests and concerns are being taken into consideration,” said Grant Hunter, who represents Cardston-Taber-Warner.
 
Bill 6, the Enhanced Protection for Farm and Ranch Workers Act, would also make Workers’ Compensation Board coverage mandatory for farm workers as of Jan. 1. The sector would also be subject to labour standards such as vacation pay and minimum wage.
 
Of the nine consultation meetings currently scheduled across the province, three have space available: Vegreville, Athabasca and Grande Prairie.
 
Meetings in Leduc, Red Deer, Olds, Okotoks, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat have reached capacity.
 
Hunter said more consultations should be held in southern Alberta, where many farms are clustered. In Lethbridge, Okotoks and Red Deer, for example, the meetings were limited to 150 people, but in Athabasca there is space for 450 people and in Grande Prairie, there is room for 350.
 
Tim Hoven, an organic beef farmer who runs Hoven Farms, said he was lucky to snag a coveted spot at the Red Deer meeting.
 
“I find it a little frustrating that the consultations will be taking place after the legislation will probably already be passed,” he said.
 
Hoven had an accident four years ago and does support new safety regulations for farm workers, but said the legislation shouldn’t lump corporate operations together with smaller family farms.
 
“You can’t put them all into the same basket,” he said.
 
Source : LeaderPost

Trending Video

Follow the Potato Farmer

Video: Follow the Potato Farmer

We are taking students out to southern Manitoba to Hespler Farms! Farmer Wayne will teach students how he plants and cares for his potato crop and why potatoes are such a unique crop to grow. Teachers, check out your AITC Dashboard for Math'd Potatoes, a potato-themed classroom resource to pair with this tour video. Thank you to Peak of the Market and Penner Farm Services for making this event possible.