Toronto Star

GFL improves safety rating

Trash-collection firm that took over areas west of Yonge regains ‘satisfacto­ry’ grade

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

The company that collects Toronto household waste west of Yonge St. has improved its safety record, regaining a “satisfacto­ry” rating from the provincial government.

In March 2014, the Star reported that Ontario’s transporta­tion ministry had downgraded GFL Environmen­tal Inc.’s rating to conditiona­l.

Its “overall safety violation rate,” based on a complex formula, was 76.2 per cent — well above the 70 per cent satisfacto­ry threshold and worse than more than 99 per cent of commercial vehicle operators in the province.

At the time, GFL and the city’s solid waste department said the rating was affected by collisions in 2012 involving GFL drivers getting to know the routes after they took over curbside collection from city crews.

The city helped GFL develop a “work plan” for improvemen­t and predicted the rating would rebound, something that has in fact happened.

GFL improved its company-wide safety rating to 59.4 per cent for the two-year period ending March 13, 2015, provincial records show.

The company’s 692-truck fleet had 274 collisions and 45 conviction­s while travelling 17.5 million kilometres in Canada.

Patrick Dovigi, GFL’s chief execu- tive, said in an interview: “We’re happy. We have a satisfacto­ry rating and we’re going to keep pushing for a world class safety rating.”

Beth Goodger, Toronto’s solid waste chief, said: “We’re satisfied that GFL has put the necessary measures in place,” to improve safety. Those measures include hiring additional staff, weekly safety meetings and a “zero-tolerance” approach to unsafe practices.

The city has improved the provincial safety rating for its entire fleet to 35.9 per cent, she said.

Goodger said she does not have a breakdown of the rating just for city crews that pick up household waste east of Yonge St.

In last fall’s municipal election, John Tory promised to expand private household waste pickup to the entire city.

In January, however, the mayor supported the public works department asking city staff to study the issue, and said the results might make a valid case for the status quo.

Asked for a response to GFL’s improved rating, Dave Hewitt, acting president of CUPE Local 416, said in an email: “We believe that services such as solid waste management are better, more accountabl­e and more responsive to the community when directly delivered and operated.”

 ?? RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR ?? GFL workers head out to collect garbage in 2012. The first few months of collection proved difficult for the firm as drivers got to know new routes.
RENÉ JOHNSTON/TORONTO STAR GFL workers head out to collect garbage in 2012. The first few months of collection proved difficult for the firm as drivers got to know new routes.

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