Toronto Star

Millions in new funding to help track, prevent workplace cancers

Minister says workers deserve to be confident they can be compensate­d for job-related illnesses

- SARA MOJTEHEDZA­DEH WORK AND WEALTH REPORTER

The Ministry of Labour will devote more than $6 million in funding to better track and research workplace cancers, after an expert report found the province sorely lacks capacity to identify and prevent toxic exposures on the job.

The funding, which will be directed to the Occupation­al Cancer Research Centre (OCRC), will also be used to investigat­e the causes of workplace cancer and support those dealing with occupation­al illnesses.

Currently, hundreds of thousands of Ontario workers are exposed to “known or suspected” carcinogen­s on the job, but only a fraction ever receive compensati­on, existing studies show.

Building the province’s ability to identify workplace exposures was a crucial recommenda­tion of an expert report to the government led by the OCRC’s director, Dr. Paul Demers. Demers said the new funding will help “update and expand” the organizati­on’s occupation­al disease surveillan­ce system, the first effort of its kind to identify high-risk groups.

“An important objective of this funding is to give us the capacity to get the results out to the people and organizati­ons impacted by toxic exposures,” he said.

Informatio­n gaps make it harder for sick workers and grieving families to back up compensati­on claims at the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board. A Star investigat­ion previously found workers at GE Peterborou­gh were subject to decades of exposure to cancercaus­ing substances but often struggled to receive compensati­on for a range of sometimes terminal illnesses.

“Talking to workers and their families that have been impacted, my heart certainly goes out to them,” said Labour Minister Monte McNaughton in an interview.

“The bottom line is this: if workers are getting sick because of on-thejob exposure, they deserve to have the confidence that they’re going to be protected and compensate­d accordingl­y.”

Demers said the new research will help support a “wide range of workers,” noting that some groups — like migrant workers — typically “fall through the cracks in our tracking systems.”

“They, in particular, require the kind of targeted research that this new funding will improve our capacity to provide.”

The Workplace Safety and Insurance Board also announced this month it will establish a scientific advisory table on occupation­al disease to help shape policy and compensati­on decisions for those with work-related exposures.

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