Skip to content

Brought to you by

Dentons logo in black and white

Dentons Canadian Occupational Health & Safety Law

Keeping you current on OHS Laws and Developments in Canada.

open menu close menu

Dentons Canadian Occupational Health & Safety Law

  • Home
  • About Us

Alberta’s joint work site health and safety committee requirements are changing

By Cristina Wendel
January 27, 2020
  • Amendments to Safety Laws
  • Safety Professionals - Practice Issues
Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via email Share on LinkedIn

The Alberta government recently issued some changes to the joint work site health and safety committee (JWSHSC) requirements.

The Alberta Occupational Health and Safety Act requires that employers with more than 20 workers establish a JWSHSC . Since June 2018, the JWSHSC requirement was site-based. This meant that employers with multiple work sites or locations within Alberta had to have separate JWSHSCs for each of their work sites/locations. However, effective January 31, 2020, the JWSHSC requirement will be employer-based. As such, employers with multiple work sites/locations will only be required to have one JWSHSC. Occupational health and safety officers will still have the ability to require an employer to form a JWSHSC at any location if the officer considers it necessary.

This change will not apply to multi-employer work sites. Where there are 2 or more employers with more than 20 workers at a work site with work expected to last 90 days or more, the prime contractor (if applicable) or employers at the work site will still be required to have a JWSHSC for that work site.

The government also recently changed the training requirements for JWSHSC chairs and co-chairs and health and safety representatives. Health and safety representatives are required for employers with 5-19 workers. Whereas JWSHSC chairs and co-chairs and health and safety representatives were previously required to complete 2 courses, that has now been pared down to only one 6-8 hour course. That course must be provided by a designated training agency.

More information about the training requirements can be found here.

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share via email Share on LinkedIn
Subscribe and stay updated
Receive our latest blog posts by email.
Stay in Touch
Cristina Wendel

About Cristina Wendel

Cristina advises and represents employers in all aspects of occupational health and safety matters, including day-to-day compliance, incident response, investigations and defending employers charged with occupational health and safety offences. She also represents federally and provincially regulated, unionized and non-unionized employers in a variety of employment and labour law matters such as wrongful dismissal claims, employment standards disputes, human rights issues, labour arbitrations and labour relations board proceedings.

All posts Full bio

RELATED POSTS

  • Caselaw Developments
  • Safety Professionals - Practice Issues

OHS Consultant Loses OHS Reprisal Case

A health and safety consultant has lost his case against his employer, a health and safety association, in which he […]

By Adrian Miedema
  • Caselaw Developments
  • Prosecutions / Charges
  • Safety Professionals - Practice Issues

Employer May Not Delegate Authority over Safety to Joint Health and Safety Committee: Arbitrator

An Ontario arbitrator has held, in dismissing a union grievance, that it would be illegal for an employer to delegate […]

By Adrian Miedema
  • Amendments to Safety Laws
  • Safety - Risk Management
  • Safety Professionals - Practice Issues

Three months until July 1 training deadline: Update on Ontario’s new safety awareness training requirement

Ontario employers have less than three months left to ensure that their workers and supervisors get “basic occupational health and […]

By Adrian Miedema

About Dentons

Redefining possibilities. Together, everywhere. For more information visit dentons.com

Grow, Protect, Operate, Finance. Dentons, the law firm of the future is here. Copyright 2023 Dentons. Dentons is a global legal practice providing client services worldwide through its member firms and affiliates. Please see dentons.com for Legal notices.

Categories

  • Amendments to Safety Laws
  • Caselaw Developments
  • COVID-19
  • General
  • Government Safety Investigations
  • International Standards
  • Occupational Health and Safety
  • Other Safety Developments
  • Prosecutions / Charges
  • Safety – Risk Management
  • Safety Professionals – Practice Issues
  • Violence and Harassment

Subscribe and stay updated

Receive our latest blog posts by email.

Stay in Touch

Dentons logo in black and white

© 2025 Dentons

  • Legal notices
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of use
  • Cookies on this site