OHS Fines Scorecard for 2024 (April 11 to May 15)

Mid-April to mid-May was the biggest month of the year for reported OHS fines of over $20,000 in terms of both fine volume and fine amounts. There were 12 fines reported across Canada during the period, as opposed to 10 in the previous 4-week period. But the real headline was fine amounts.

Table 1. OHS Fines in 2024 At A Glance (through May 15)

Period Total Reported Fines Reported 6-Figure Fines
Jan to mid-Feb 11 6
Mid-Feb to mid-March 11 4
Mid-March to mid-April 10 2
Mid-April to mid-May 12 9
Total 44 21

Source: Bongarde

OHS Fines of $100,000 or More

There were 9 reported OHS fines of 6 figures or more, including 3 of the top 5 highest fines for the year–$600,000 against an Ontario truck manufacturer for a machine shop explosion that killed 6 workers and $360,000 against an Alberta heavy equipment supply company for a crane fatality.

Table 2. Top 5 OHS Fines of 2024 At A Glance (through May 15)

Fine Amount Province Type of Company/Incident
1 $710,488 British Columbia Shipyard/Confined space asphyxiation
2 $600,000 Ontario Truck manufacturer/Explosion during handling of flammables resulting in 6 fatalities
3 $390,000 Alberta Oil & gas/Excavation fatality
4 $360,000 Alberta Heavy equipment/Crane fatality
5 $350,000 Alberta Oil & gas/Pressurized materials fatality

Source: Bongarde

Ontario has reported the most 6-figure OHS fines of any province with 10 followed closely by Alberta with 8. Together, the 2 provinces have accounted for 4 of the biggest OHS fines of the year. BC, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick are the only other provinces that have reported 6-figure OHS fines in 2024 with 1 apiece. All of the top 5 fines have involved critical injury, including 2 cases in which multiple workers died. Oil and gas companies have been on the receiving end of 2 of the top 5 OHS fines.

Overall OHS Fines

Of the 12 significant OHS fines reported from April 10 to mid-May, 6 came from Ontario, including a case in which a company and its corporate director were fined separately for an explosion that killed 6 workers. Alberta reported 3 major fines during the period, all of them in the 6-figure range. Saskatchewan reported 2 big fines, including a province-high $260,000 penalty for a material handling incident. BC was the only other province to make this month’s list.

Table 3. OHS Fines Reported from April 11, to May 15, 2024* (over $20,000)

Jurisdiction Fine Company What Happened Violation(s)
ON $600,000 Eastway Tank, Pump and Meter Limited Fabrication shop explosion during wet testing of tank truck kills 6 workers and seriously injures another Failure to ensure that: i. diesel fuel to be used for wet testing of trucks wasn’t contaminated with gasoline or other flammable substance; and ii. workers received safety instruction on the proper procedure for storing and handling fuel
AB $360,000 Isolation Equipment Services Inc. Overhead crane operator killed after getting pinned by materials being used to position a valve bonnet that fell out of the crane’s rigging Failure to take measures to eliminate the danger of equipment or material that was dislodged or moved
AB $330,000 Westpower Equipment Ltd. Worker operating an overhead crane to install a pump cover gets killed when the pump cover releases from the rigging and hits him Failure to ensure a worker’s health and safety
SK $260,000 Richelieu Hardware Canada Ltd. Worker suffers serious injury while attempting to load a 4,000-pound crate of glass onto a truck Failure to ensure that a worker required or permitted to assemble, use, maintain or dismantle rigging was trained in safe rigging practices
ON $220,000 2236376 Ontario Inc. Crane that wasn’t de-energized before servicing tips into the platform of a scissor lift causing 2 workers to fall 21.5 feet, one of whom dies Failure to ensure to ensure that the crane was blocked and prevented from movement during maintenance or troubleshooting
ON $120,000 TMI Contracting and Equipment Rental Ltd. A traffic signalling breakdown results in a worker’s getting A worker was fatally struck by a dump truck at a landfill site Failure to ensure that the signaller communicated with the truck driver via a telecommunication system or, where visual signals were clearly visible to the driver, via prearranged visual signals
ON $110,000 Lactalis Canada Inc. Dairy plant worker suffers serious burns while trying to repair a Cleaning in Place (CIP) pipeline system Failure to provide a worker information, instruction and supervision on the safe lockout/tagout of the CIP pipeline system
ON $110,000 Performance Finishing & Fabrication Inc. Worker gets killed after being hit by a falling metal beam that wasn’t secured to the forklift carrying it Failure to ensure that a metal beam was secured and wouldn’t fall while being transported on a forklift
AB $102,000 Boucher Bros. Lumber Ltd. Worker contacts the blades of a wood planer and suffers serious hand injuries Unspecified but probably failure to ensure the blades were properly guarded
SK $95,000 City of Prince Albert Worker suffers serious injury after falling more than 3 metres while attempting to dislodge a hose nozzle Failure to ensure that workers at risk of falling over 3 metres use fall protection
BC* $24,560 Bluesky Organics Corp WorkSafeBC inspectors discover that company hasn’t implemented ordered safety measures Failure to comply with the terms of an OHS order

* BC OHS fines get reported a month late but are included in the most recent period to ensure continuity and consistency for comparison purposes across all provinces

Source: Bongarde