1 / 21

Panel II: Tripartite Solutions

Panel II: Tripartite Solutions. John Vergunst – Mining Engineer – Ontario Ministry of Labour. MLRC Diesel Subcommittee – diesel emission testing at Creighton Mine. This presentation will focus on the role of the: Mining Legislative Review Committee MOL – Mining Program Committee

ludwig
Télécharger la présentation

Panel II: Tripartite Solutions

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Panel II: Tripartite Solutions John Vergunst – Mining Engineer – Ontario Ministry of Labour MLRC Diesel Subcommittee – diesel emission testing at Creighton Mine 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  2. This presentation will focus on the role of the: • Mining Legislative • Review Committee • MOL – Mining • Program Committee • Safety Partners • Internal • Responsibility • System MLRC Diesel Subcommittee - snap acceleration emission testing on CANMET diesel tractor 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  3. Mining Legislative Review Committee General Terms of Reference (1981) To provide the Minister of Labour with advice and counsel in respect to legislation and regulations relating to health and safety in the mines. 2007 Members: (each member has an alternate) 4 @ Industry Members (nominated by Ontario Mining Association) currently: CVRD Inco, Xstrata, North Gate Minerals, J.S. Redpath 4 @ Labour Members (nominated by Ontario Federation of Labour) currently: USW (CVRD) , USW (David Bell Mine), USW (Staff Rep), USW (District 6) Neutral Chairperson: currently Northern Development and Mines Administrative & Technical Support: Ministry of Labour 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  4. Mining Legislative Review Committee • The terms of reference for the Committee are: • to apprise the Minister of matters affecting the mining industry • to ensure that legislation provides an effective level of health and safety in the workplace, • review existing mining regulations, and propose amendments thereto, • where necessary, establish sub-committees to investigate and report on specific areas of mining safety with a view to drafting new legislation, • advise the Minister of required legislative which will promote the health of workers and safe working conditions in Ontario mines. 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  5. Mining Legislative Review Committee Members appointed by Management or Labour Subcommittees Diesel Hoisting Deep Hoisting Braking Electrical Others as Required Subcommittees chaired by Ministry of Labour 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  6. Mining Legislative Review Committee • To ensure that effective regulation is in place: • Any member (labour or management) can propose amendments to the Regulations. • the committee reviews all Coroner Jury Recommendations • the committee reviews serious incidents and statistical trends for mines, mills, contractors, diamond drillers, pit and quarries. • the committee reviews all Guidance material issued by the Ministry of Labour with respect to mines to ensure that the material is relevant, accurate and represents good industry practice • Mining Health & Safety Guidelines • Hazard Alerts 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  7. MINING PROVINCIAL PROGRAM ADVISORY COMMITTEE • intended for consultation and communication among the regions and main office, both within the Mining Program and between Industrial and Construction programs • composed of staff throughout the province, and includes inspectors, engineers, program coordinators and main office staff. • This committee • Identifies emerging issues • Monitors the effectiveness of the mining program • Provides advice on guidance material and policy for inspectors • recommends Regulation change to the MLRC 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  8. Typical M.O.L. Publications to Mining Industry • Health and Safey Guidelines • explains a section of the Regulation • outlines means by which compliance can be achieved • also outlines or gives examples of best industry practice • Hazard Alert • highlights a previously unknown and unique hazard with a high opportunity for repeat. • It sets out the contravention, if any, and suggests the corrective action and the Ministry's position on enforcement 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  9. SUBJECT: U/G FUEL STORAGE, TRANSFER, HANDLING AND DISPENSING FOR DIESEL ENGINES NOTE: This Health and Safety Guideline discuses the application and definitions, location and construction, handling/delivery systems, tanks and piping, mobile fuelling tanks, dispensing, fire protection, electrical, fire safety hazard review, operation of system, maintenance and inspection, reference list of codes and standards for fuelling station design, sample maintenance and inspection checklist. Existing pertinent legislation: 120. (1) A service garage, service bay or fuelling station in an underground mine shall, REVIEWED and APPROVED BY THE MINING PROGRAM PROVINCIAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE, MINING LEGISLATIVE REVIEW COMMITTEE and BY THE PROVINCIAL CO-ORDINATOR-MINING 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  10. VISIBILITY ON LARGE MINING VEHICLES • (Alert #M2/0594 ISSN 1195-5228. 2002) • RECOMMENDATIONS: • Effective lighting in areas near dumping locations or where pedestrian • and vehicle traffic is common • Signs posted to restrict equipment travel or alert operator to hazards • Reflective markers, barricades, strobe lights to identify where people • are working in a haulageway. • Where required haulageways must include safety bays §112(b) • Pedestrians should make themselves as visible as possible, cap lamp • on hat • Pedestrians should communicate with operator before passing • equipment in tight quarters. 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  11. VISIBILITY ON LARGE MINING VEHICLES (Alert #M2/0594 ISSN 1195-5228. 2002) 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  12. Safety Partners • Mines and Aggregates Safety & Health Association (MASHA) • Canadian Diamond Drill Association • Contractor’s Safety Association • Ontario Mining Association • IEES Trillium Chapter (Contract Drilling & Blasting) • MASHA (funded by WSIB) • Produces industry guides on a wide variety of topics – ground control, • barricades, ventilation, etc • Produces statistics on injuries • Deliveries mining specific training to the industry • Provides and delivers Mine Rescue Training • ASSOCIATIONS: • produce specialized training material, hazard alerts • provides Ministry with a point of contact 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  13. 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  14. Safety Partners 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  15. 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  16. Inter-Ministerial Update Meeting with respect to new projects • all Ministries with an interest in the new mine are normally present so that the client can present the overview of orebody, infrastructure, environmental studies, etc • for expansion of existing mines, worker representatives usually participate (no worker representation may be possible for a start-up) 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  17. IRS – Internal Responsibility System • Ontario’s Occupational Health and Safety Act (1980) is based on the Internal Responsibility System • The Act assigns roles and responsibilities to all workplace parties. • The IRS is based on the principal that every individual in the workplace is responsible for health and safety. That includes CEO, executives, managers, supervisors and workers. 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  18. IRS – Internal Responsibility System • In 2000 a Steering Committee formed: labour, industry and intergovernmental agency representatives • clear description of IRS developed • Description of roles & responsibilities for workplace parties with: • direct responsibility – workers, supervisors, managers, CEO • contributive responsibility – MOL Inspectorate, Unions, WSIB, Safety Associations • Audit tool developed and tested at 8 mines 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  19. IRS – Internal Responsibility System • Direct correlation between healthy IRS and health and safety performance • fewer accidents • helps eliminate unsafe activities • allows Joint Health & Safety Committee to monitor compliance • Results posted on Ministry website http://www.labour.gov.on.ca/english/hs/mining/syn_minirs_4.html 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  20. IRS – Internal Responsibility System • IRS is not a substitute for planned workplace inspections aimed at ensuring compliance with health and safety legislation • The IRS will only work given the willingness of management and workers • IRS is a behavior and cannot be legislated • To have impact on reducing injuries, industry must have workplace parties’ commitment EVERY ONE NEEDS TO WORK TOGETHER TO REDUCE WORKPLACE INJURIES 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

  21. Questions ? Comments ? 2007 NAALC - PANEL II - MOL

More Related