Alberta Farm Fatalities falling off the Radar

Government drops public reporting of farm deaths

EDMONTON – The Alberta government’s decision to withhold information on farm fatalities is an attempt to move the issue to the back burner and off the public radar, says the Alberta Federation of Labour (AFL), the largest labour organization in Alberta. The AFL represents over 150,000 Alberta workers.

“Farm workers are already left unprotected under health and safety regulations,” says Nancy Furlong, Secretary Treasurer of the Alberta Federation of Labour.

"The decision to cease reporting fatalities is a painful example of how agricultural workers are being erased in Alberta,” says Furlong, The news the province would stop reporting information on farm worker deaths and injuries was delivered unceremoniously through a government website. The province offered no meaningful explanation for the change.

Alberta remains the only province where farm workers are excluded from occupational health and safety laws, as well as legislation governing hours of work and overtime, statutory holidays, vacation pay, the right to refuse unsafe work, being informed of work-related dangers and compensation if they are injured on the job.

The Government of Alberta also continues to ignore the advice of one of its own judges. A judicial inquiry into the death of farm worker Kevin Chandler found Alberta’s discriminatory practice against farm workers unjustifiable. Still, the province has done nothing.

“It is the government’s duty to protect workers, but also to report their deaths and injuries. Death and injury prevention requires knowledge of the frequency and nature of the incidents,” says Furlong, noting that the latest data available on the agency now reporting these statistics, the Canadian Agriculture Injury Reporting, is from 2005.

 “The Alberta Federation of Labour declared August 20th as Farm Workers Day at our 2005 Convention, and has been calling on the government to allow farm workers the same protections as most Alberta workers enjoy,” says Furlong. “It’s particularly insulting to the families of those killed on the job to have to call on the government to continue to simply report these incidents.”

“This decision to stop reporting the number and nature of farm deaths helps to hide the real problem – Alberta’s deplorable lack of workplace protection for farms workers in the province,” concludes Furlong.

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MEDIA CONTACT: Nancy Furlong, Secretary Treasurer        780-720-8945 (cell)

Lethbridge media contact:

Shannon Phillips, Director of Policy Analysis                             403-330-7898


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