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January/February 2003
Whose Line Is It Anyway?
By Dean Jobb
NOVA SCOTIA OH&S OFFICER David Walsh
was on his way to inspect a sawmill one sunny winter morning when he came
upon a work crew at a highway intersection north of Halifax. The crew was
using a boom truck to replace an overhead traffic light and the arm was
close to overhead wires -- too close, Walsh thought.
"When I saw the set-up, I got very
alarmed, very quickly, for obvious reasons. I was worried that someone was
going to get electrocuted," he recalls. Walsh pulled over and began
asking questions. What voltage were those wires carrying? Who was
responsible for ensuring the boom stayed clear of them?
No one, it turned out. A crew from the
provincial Department of Transportation and Public Works was on site to
control traffic, but signal maintenance had been contracted out to a
private firm, Black and MacDonald Ltd. "The reaction I got from the
transportation official was, 'Well, it's not my problem, it's the other
guy's problem'," Walsh says. "And that's a position that we
don't accept."
Walsh issued a stop-work order.
Repositioning the boom truck away from the power line enabled the job to
be completed. It was later discovered that the wires carried 14,400 volts.
Had the boom touched them, Walsh says, "the results would probably
have been lethal" for the operator. Both the contractor and the
transportation department were charged under Nova Scotia's Occupational
Health and Safety Act.
Black and MacDonald Ltd. pleaded guilty to
allowing an employee to work within three metres of live wires without
taking proper precautions, and was fined $5,000. The department went to
trial and was convicted last September 30 under section 15(a) of the
OH&S Act, which requires a "constructor" -- defined in the
act as a party that undertakes or contracts another to work on a project
-- to take "every precaution that is reasonable in the circumstances
to ensure the health and safety of persons at or near a project."
Judge John MacDougall of Nova Scotia's
provincial court issued a written ruling that provides insights into the
due diligence required of anyone who hires a contractor to complete
specific tasks -- often a murky area of oh&s law.
"The defence was essentially that all
[the department] really had to do was contract out the work and through
their tendering process ensure that, on paper, the subcontractor had a
good safety policy," says Richard Hartlen, the Windsor, Nova Scotia
lawyer who prosecuted the case. "Judge MacDougall said that's not
enough ... That's pretty relevant, particularly in an era where the
government is contracting out more and more services."
Two years ago, the department called for
tenders to carry out the maintenance work then being done by its Lights
and Signals Division. Black and MacDonald won, on the strength of what the
judge described as "an impressive submission," and a contract
was signed in March, 2000.
"On paper," the judge wrote,
Black and MacDonald outlined a safety plan that appeared reasonable.
"However, the evidence leads to no other conclusion than that it is
irrelevant with respect to the installation of the traffic light
standard."
The boom truck operator, a man with 25
years' experience, testified it was not his job to check the voltage, even
though he was the person at greatest risk of electrocution. "His
cavalier approach to this particular job appears to be consistent with
that of his employer," the judge observed.
Conspicuously absent from the contractor's
safety strategy was the practice -- developed when the department did the
work in-house -- of bringing an electrician on-site before such
installations, to evaluate the hazard posed by power lines and to contact
the utility for information or assistance, if necessary.
"Since TPW [Transportation and Public
Works] was aware of the potential hazard, it cannot hide behind [Black and
MacDonald's] naked promise to carry out the work reasonably and
legally," Judge MacDougall ruled. "TPW has a responsibility and
the resources to ensure the system is implemented and monitored."
To ensure steps are taken to avoid overhead
wires, he said, the department need only require the contractor to submit
a hazard report by fax or e-mail. Under the contract, all maintenance work
must be approved in advance, affording the department an opportunity to
ensure precautions are followed on each job.
The department was fined $5,000, with the
money earmarked to promote public awareness of safety issues.
The lesson, Walsh contends, is simple.
"You can't contract out of your liability." His advice to those
hiring contractors? "Make your contract conditional on the fact that
there's certain performances. You want these people, when they come to
your site, to abide by the laws, but most importantly, you want to be able
to audit that yourself, to ask the questions ... and keep a record of who
you've given direction to."
Dean Jobb is a freelance writer in
Halifax.
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