The Effectiveness of Bill 70 and Joint Health and Safety Committees in Reducing Injuries in the Workplace: The Case of Ontario
The shift towards the internal responsibility system and the mandating of Joint Health and Safety Committees in the early 1980s represented a radical departure in terms of how health and safety were regulated in the workplace. This paper examines the effectiveness of this institutional change using firm level data provided by the Worker's Compensation Board on lost time accidents from 1976 to 1989. It finds that where management and labour had some sympathy for the co-management of health and safety through joint committees, the new system significantly reduced lost-time accident rates. At workplaces where either labour or management resisted the spread of co-management the mandating of committees appears to have little effect on lost-time accident rates.
Year of publication: |
1996
|
---|---|
Authors: | Lewchuk, Wayne ; Robb, A. Leslie ; Walters, Vivienne |
Published in: |
Canadian Public Policy. - University of Toronto Press. - Vol. 22.1996, 3, p. 225-243
|
Publisher: |
University of Toronto Press |
Saved in:
Saved in favorites
Similar items by person
-
Lewchuk, Wayne, (1996)
-
The short-run dynamics of the Canadian labour market
Denton, Frank T., (1976)
-
Class inequality and health care : the origins and impact of the National Health Service
Walters, Vivienne, (1980)
- More ...