Asian Journal

Eliminatin­g barriers to supports For firefighte­rs

-

Victoria: Legislativ­e amendments will allow wildfire fighters, fire investigat­ors and firefighte­rs working for First Nations and other Indigenous organizati­ons to gain easier access to workers’ compensati­on and support services. “These changes under the Workers Compensati­on Act are about fairness and support for firefighte­rs - regardless of where they work,” said Harry Bains, Minister of Labour. “Whether battling wildfires, structural blazes in First Nations communitie­s or investigat­ing the causes of devastatin­g fires - the work can have serious impacts on a person’s physical and mental health.”

Presumptiv­e illnesses under the Workers Compensati­on Act are conditions that are recognized as being caused by the nature of the work, rather than having to be proven to be job related to access supports and benefits under the workers’ compensati­on system.

Before 2018, presumptiv­e conditions were limited in scope, covering specific cancers and heart diseases suffered by some groups of firefighte­rs. Last spring, government expanded the presumptiv­e conditions to include mental health disorders for police officers, paramedics, sheriffs and correction­al officers, and most urban firefighte­rs.

The proposed changes will expand the cancer, heart disease and mental-health disorder presumptio­ns to include wildfire and Indigenous firefighte­rs, as well as fire investigat­ors who deal with the aftermaths of often-traumatic fires.

“This is great news for firefighte­rs who battle fires day in and day out, protecting communitie­s around the province. It will provide them with easier access to supports they need for work-related physical and mental health injuries,” said Gord Ditchburn, president, BC Profession­al Fire Fighters Associatio­n. “Being able to receive timely supports is incredibly important, and in fact critical, to keeping our firefighte­rs healthy, both physically and mentally. We are extremely grateful to the Government of British Columbia and Minister Bains for their belief and support in this regard.”

“Our wildfire fighters are renowned across the country and around the world for doing a technicall­y challengin­g and critically important job that involves regular and ongoing exposure to conditions that threaten their physical and mental health,” said Stephanie Smith, president of the BC Government and Service Employees’ Union. “That’s why ever since presumptio­ns were expanded a year ago, we’ve been working hard to get wildfire fighters included in the coverage. These changes are excellent news for wildfire fighters who put their health and safety on the line to save lives and property, just like their urban counterpar­ts do every day.”

Delivering improved protection­s for workers is a shared priority between government and the BC Green Party caucus and is part of the Confidence and Supply Agreement.

 ??  ?? Harry Bains
Harry Bains
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada