>The plan will see the 13 jurisdictions work to harmonize training for working at heights and mobile lifts by Jan. 1, 2027.
>
>The proposal was put forward by Minister David Piccini and endorsed by all provinces and territories, along with the federal Secretary of State for Labour John Zerucelli.
>
>“I think it was a fundamental recognition that a certification earned anywhere should mean something everywhere and that provincial borders shouldn’t be provincial barriers,” Piccini told Global News in an interview on Monday.
>
>The provinces and territories will also consult on training for hoisting and rigging, plus trenching and shoring, by the same date. In addition, work will be done on certifications for construction supervisors and entry-level workers by May 2027.
ZestyBeanDude on
>Canada’s provinces and territories plan to create a single nationwide standard for workplace training that Ontario’s labour minister touts as a “one Canada, one standard” plan.
>The plan will see the 13 jurisdictions work to harmonize training for working at heights and mobile lifts by Jan. 1, 2027.
This sounds good, especially since aren’t these considered to be technically inter-provincial trade barriers?
FalseZookeepergame15 on
I like what I’m seeing getting needless barriers taken down.
Remarkable_Vanilla34 on
I swear to god if this means I have to wear one of those stupid hard hats with a chin strap…
Pathos886 on
No more tie off at 4 feet please! Ridiculous.
ARunOfTheMillPerson on
Omg…the $50 courses that you can do in an hour are really not the issue. I think it actually speaks to how disconnected they are from understanding what would be a valuable outcome of standardization.
Troubled202 on
One country one standard. Is that too much to ask for?
CobblePots95 on
I want to see announcements like this every week.
WiseDebt7345 on
Just one of around a thousand interprovincial trade barriers.
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>The plan will see the 13 jurisdictions work to harmonize training for working at heights and mobile lifts by Jan. 1, 2027.
>
>The proposal was put forward by Minister David Piccini and endorsed by all provinces and territories, along with the federal Secretary of State for Labour John Zerucelli.
>
>“I think it was a fundamental recognition that a certification earned anywhere should mean something everywhere and that provincial borders shouldn’t be provincial barriers,” Piccini told Global News in an interview on Monday.
>
>The provinces and territories will also consult on training for hoisting and rigging, plus trenching and shoring, by the same date. In addition, work will be done on certifications for construction supervisors and entry-level workers by May 2027.
>Canada’s provinces and territories plan to create a single nationwide standard for workplace training that Ontario’s labour minister touts as a “one Canada, one standard” plan.
>The plan will see the 13 jurisdictions work to harmonize training for working at heights and mobile lifts by Jan. 1, 2027.
This sounds good, especially since aren’t these considered to be technically inter-provincial trade barriers?
I like what I’m seeing getting needless barriers taken down.
I swear to god if this means I have to wear one of those stupid hard hats with a chin strap…
No more tie off at 4 feet please! Ridiculous.
Omg…the $50 courses that you can do in an hour are really not the issue. I think it actually speaks to how disconnected they are from understanding what would be a valuable outcome of standardization.
One country one standard. Is that too much to ask for?
I want to see announcements like this every week.
Just one of around a thousand interprovincial trade barriers.