Farms.com Home   News

Alberta premier defends makeup of Farm Safety working groups

Premier Rachel Notley is responding to criticisms over the appointees to six working groups tasked with setting regulations for the province's controversial farm safety act.
 
The groups were announced Friday by Agriculture Minister Oneil Carlier and Labour Minister Christina Gray. They will examine how occupational health and safety, workers compensation, labour relations and employment standards should apply to farms and ranches.
 
The directors of Wheat Growers Alberta are upset that relatively few members of the Alberta Agriculture Farm and Ranch Safety Coalition, or AgCoalition, were among the appointments.
 
They also note the groups are being chaired by professional mediators and lawyers, not farmers.
 
"Beyond the chairs, 78 working group members were announced, with 23 being part of the AgCoalition, which means the AgCoalition's representation of over 97 per cent of the ag sector in Alberta will represent 29 per cent of the government working group tables — and zero per cent of the chair positions," the group said in a news release issued Friday.
 
A coalition of 30 agriculture groups was created in January to represent the industry's concerns during the consultation process leading up to the introduction of Bill 6. They are unhappy with how the bill was rolled out last fall and call it a "sham of a process" that's about "Big Labour" and not farm safety.
 
Notley said in legislature question period Tuesday that the appointees were split between the people who run and own farms and farm workers.
 
"Farm owners and farm managers, there are 35 of them on these, and there are 27 farm workers," she said. "So to be clear, if there is a concern about balance, it's not about workers being overrepresented."
 
Source : CBC

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.