- Date
- 2010-08-17 
- Authors
- Will Verboven 
- Abstract
- If there is one issue that seems to drag on forever it is the Alberta 
 government's reluctance -- better yet pigheadedness -- to address farm
 worker safety and workplace rules. No amount of shame, human misery or
 common sense seems to be enough to move government politicians and
 bureaucrats to do the right thing.
- Newspaper title
- Calgary Herald 
- Full text
- If there is one issue that seems to drag on forever it is the Alberta 
 government's reluctance -- better yet pigheadedness -- to address farm
 worker safety and workplace rules. No amount of shame, human misery or
 common sense seems to be enough to move government politicians and
 bureaucrats to do the right thing.- One might surmise that the overwhelming impetus for the government to 
 face reality is that other provincial governments have mandatory farm
 worker health and safety legislation in place -- some of them for
 decades. Most reasonable people would see a message in that precedent
 -- but then those governments must all be wrong if one is to believe
 the position of the Alberta government on the issue. Perhaps our
 recalcitrant government needs to hire consultants to ascertain why
 those other governments are all wrong and they are right. One needs to
 remind the Alberta government that the agriculture industries of the
 other provinces did not collapse when farm worker legislation was
 implemented.- Agriculture Minister Jack Hayden has taken a step forward -- in 
 conjunction with the Employment Minister, they have initiated
 consultations on the issue. That's the least they could do considering
 that Judge Peter Barley, in a farm fatality inquiry in January of
 2009, stated that he could find no logical explanation as to why farm
 workers are not covered by the same workplace legislation as non-farm
 workers.- Now we hear rumours that rather than provide Judge Barley with a 
 logical explanation for the exemption (an impossibility in my view),
 the ministers' consultants and bureaucrats are trying to find a way to
 dodge the issue again. It seems the government may be proposing to set
 up a provincial farm safety organization designed to provide education
 and training to the agriculture industry. To get feedback on the idea,
 consultants were hired to ascertain the views of agriculture
 organizations and agri-business.- Well there is no problem with more safety education and training, 
 although existing safety organizations and agriculture department
 staff are already doing a credible job in that area. I can't help but
 suspect that the proposal may result in the creation of another
 government agency similar to the Alberta Livestock and Meat Agency, a
 bureaucratic boondoggle that replaced already existing government
 services, but I digress.- I expect any consultant's report on the issue would become instantly 
 suspect. They would have known the government's view, ideology and
 history on the topic. Consultants would also have consulted mostly
 with organizations and businesses opposed to any mandatory legislation
 that would increase their costs. Farm workers are powerless in this
 province, hence their perspective is easily ignored.- The outcome of the consultations would be predictable -- that being 
 that a provincial farm safety organization is the answer, with
 legislation as an unnecessary last resort. Presto -- the issue can be
 dodged and put off for years to come, the political temptation would
 be irresistible.- But any geniuses contemplating such political expediency need to be 
 reminded that it's all been done before next door in B.C. Years ago, a
 provincially funded farm safety organization was operated under the
 auspices of the former B.C. Federation of Agriculture. It was
 successful, but ultimately it was not the total answer. The B.C.
 government still found it necessary to implement mandatory farm worker
 legislation. I would suggest that the Alberta government resist
 political temptation and not repeat history.- One ponders that with so much common sense and precedent facing the 
 issue why does the government appear so obstinate and seemingly
 duplicitous. Those of us who observe the scheming world of agriculture
 politics in Alberta suspect that there has to be more to the story.
 That suspicion would lead right to Premier Ed Stelmach, a farmer and a
 former minister of agriculture with likely views on the topic. No
 present minister of agriculture who values his future in the cabinet
 would ignore those views. One might also suspect the crafty hand of
 the powerful cattle feedlot operators who have shown their political
 power on other issues through what seems like a direct pipeline into
 the Premier's office.- There is some irony in this whole issue, most of the large-scale 
 commercial agriculture operations in Alberta that are opposed to farm
 worker legislation already use private insurance to cover their
 workplace liability. That gets them off the hook, but it's a legal
 nightmare for workers if they try to challenge any claims. That
 approach has proven not to work in other sectors of the industrial
 economy and it's not working in the agriculture sector.- The ministers and their bureaucrats should not be engaging in what 
 seems a devious exercise to dodge and delay what is an accepted
 practice in other provinces and within other sectors of the provincial
 economy. Instead they should be seeking ways to not only implement
 farm worker health and safety legislation, but to make it the best,
 fairest and most inclusive in the country. That should be the Alberta
 way!
- Economic sectors
- Agriculture and horticulture workers 
- Content types
- Policy analysis 
- Target groups
- Public awareness 
- Geographical focuses
- Alberta 
- Languages
- English 
