Toronto Star

Unions and families call for asbestos ban

- BRUCE CHEADLE

OTTAWA— Trade unions and affected family members say it’s long past time to ban all asbestos products in Canada, calling them the country’s No. 1 workplace killer.

A tearful Michelle Côté, whose boiler maker father was diagnosed with deadly, asbestos-caused mesothelio­ma in 2014, told an Ottawa news conference that no one deserves to die this way.

According to studies funded by the Canadian Cancer Society, more than 2,000 Canadians die from asbestos exposure every year, with 580 new cases of incurable mesothelio­ma diagnosed in 2014.

Canada closed its last asbestos mine in Quebec five years ago but continues to import millions of dollars of asbestos products, including brake pads for vehicles and pipes used in building constructi­on, with imports nearly doubling between 2011 and 2015.

Hassan Yussuff of the Canadian Labour Congress says he’s been in discussion with the Liberal government and is imploring it to quickly pass legislatio­n banning the import and use of materials containing asbestos.

Yussuff says every product current- ly used containing asbestos is easily replaceabl­e, with many of the safer alternativ­es — such as ceramic brake pads — manufactur­ed right in Canada.

“There is no reason for delay,” Yussuff said Friday.

He was flanked at the news conference by several people with personal experience of asbestos tragedies.

“My dad, although still alive, is lost,” Côté said of her 71-year-old father Clém, “the big kahuna” with a zest for life who now finds it difficult to speak.

“Dad knows we can’t help those men and women who have already been exposed,” said Michelle Côté. “This plea is something he, and we, can do to stop future generation­s from facing the same death sentence.”

For every case of mesothelio­ma, there four cases of other lung cancers caused by asbestos fibres but less easily identified, said Paul Demers, the director of the occupation­al cancer research centre at Cancer Ontario.

Asbestos was recognized as a workplace carcinogen in the 1950s and has been banned in several Nordic countries for three decades, but remains legal for use in Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada