Category Archives: Health & Safety

Health & Safety

Achieving a safety culture amid a pandemic

By Gordon Murray, Wood Pellet Association of Canada
Canadian Biomass
February 17, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Every day, WPAC members and their employees work tirelessly to ensure leading safety practices are implemented and embraced. We know we will be measured by our collective efforts as an industry. Our reputation and the trust of regulators, the general public and the families of our employees depend on this. That we achieved this and more  in 2020 was no small feat in the context of a global pandemic. With the support of our partner, the BC Forest Safety Council (BCFSC), and the commitment of our members from the boardrooms to the plants across Canada, we were able to overcome the challenges of not being able to meet face to face. It meant long, virtual web conferencing, technical glitches and it required at times more patience and perseverance than most have with technology on the best of days.

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Wildfires take over from industry as major source of cancer-causing air toxins: study

By Bob Webber
The Canadian Press in CTV News
December 14, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Wildfires have taken over from industry as a major source of a group of cancer-causing chemical toxins in the air, Environment Canada says. The first national assessment of polycyclic aromatic compounds in more than 25 years has found that air has improved around aluminum and steel plants. But wildfires and vehicles have stepped in to keep average concentrations at about the same level that they were in the 1990s, says federal researcher Elisabeth Galarneau. … “The largest (remaining) source by far is the natural emissions from forest fires,” she says. The levels are still high enough in many places across the country to exceed health guidelines …Research has found that climate change contributes to bigger, hotter fires by drying out forests and extending the fire season. Other increased sources of the chemicals are increased vehicle emissions as well as residential wood-burning. The contributions of those sources vary widely from place to place.

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Statement by the Minister of Transport on the National Day of Remembrance for Road Crash Victims

By Transport Canada
Cision Newswire
November 18, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

OTTAWA, ON – Today, the Minister of Transport, the Honourable Marc Garneau, issued the following statement: …In Canada, there are approximately 1,900 road fatalities and 150,000 injuries each year. These are more than just statistics to me – these are real lives that were cut short, and the impacts these collisions have on families and victims are immeasurable. On this National Day of Remembrance for Road Crash Victims, I encourage all Canadians to take time to remember victims of road collisions and their families. Over the past two decades, road fatalities have declined 34 per cent and serious injuries 42 per cent. …That is why in 2020, the Government of Canada made multi-million dollar investments in the Enhanced Road Safety Transfer Payment Program, which aims to reduce road-related collisions, injuries and fatalities, while encouraging harmonization with provincial and territorial road safety initiatives.

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High tech satellite devices protecting people and equipment

By Find Me Spot
Northern Ontario Business
November 17, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

…the SPOT family of innovative satellite communications devices, utilizes satellite technology to keep businesses, individuals – and equipment – connected and accounted for. …Amongst the product line offered by SPOT are three unique devices that can be used by industry to help keep workers and assets safe. For example, the SPOT X provides two-way satellite messaging when users are off the grid or beyond reliable cellular coverage. Send and receive updates via text no matter where you are working. The SPOT Gen4, on the other hand, is a one-way satellite GPS messenger device that lets, employers and colleagues know users are okay. Finally, the SPOT Trace is a satellite tracking device that offers advanced tracking and movement notification for valuable assets. The SPOT X and Gen4 devices also come with an SOS button.

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Minister Garneau on inaugural National Drone Safety Awareness Day

By Transport Canada
Cision Newswire
November 13, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada

Marc Garneau

OTTAWA, Ontario — The Minister of Transport, the Honourable Marc Garneau… “I am proud to recognize Canada’s first annual National Drone Safety Awareness Day. This day recognizes the exciting and innovative world of drones and the important role all drone pilots play in flying safely and keeping drones at a safe distance from people and other aircraft. “As the popularity and responsibility of drone flying increases, Canada remains a strong advocate for the safe use of drones while encouraging innovation and economic growth in this sector. Our drone regulations balance practicality and the safe use of drones, which can create new opportunities for Canadians, and allow recreational and non-recreational drone pilots to safely access Canadian airspace.

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Fire at Domtar put out quick

By Brianne Foley
Castanet Kelowna
February 18, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Emergency crews were at the Domtar mill overnight dealing with a small fire. At around 11:30 p.m. Wednesday night, Kamloops Fire Rescue were called to the mill in response to a small fire that had broken out. …“The fire was quickly extinguished but there are still hotspots and we have to allow, with the winter time, that the steam creates a lot of smoke, so it appears to take a lot longer to cool down,” KFR Platoon Captain Mike Haynes told Castanet Kamloops. …The fire had burnt through a hole in the exterior wall of the steam plant. …According to KFR, there is no report that the fire impacted operations.

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Pinnacle Pellet in Smithers makes noise reduction progress

BC Local News
February 11, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

SMITHERS, BC — Jeff Johnson, general manager of the Smithers pellet plant says Pinnacle’s noise reduction efforts are paying off. “We have had positive feedback from the residents already,” commented Johnson to Smithers town council Feb. 9. Johnson was part of a delegation to council’s regular meeting with Scott Bax, Pinnacle COO, who gave council an update on the inititatives they have already implemented and one that will be done by the end of February. Johnson explained that back up beepers on moving equipment had been switched to a white noise type of alarm. They had also removed Grizzly screens, as loading equipment “kept banging into the screens causing part of the noise issue.”

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Tree Frog Masks – Three Layers of Cotton Keep You Safe!

By Sandy McKellar
Tree Frog Masks
February 8, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Tree Frog Editor, Sandy McKellar has a collection of high quality, three-layer, 100% cotton masks available for purchase from her Etsy page. Each mask features reversible two-sided design and around-the-head elastic for better comfort and fit.  COVID-19 is spread through infected droplets from a person’s mouth or nose. According to the BCCDC, “Some people can spread the virus when they have very mild symptoms or may not know that they have COVID-19. Wearing a non-medical, cloth mask, is now required in many indoor public spaces by people 12 years and older. This includes shopping malls, grocery stores, community centres and on public transportation or in taxis and ride shares. It is required in retail settings and restaurants and coffee shops except while eating or drinking. This requirement applies to both staff and customers in these settings.” Stay safe with a TreeFrogMask!

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Rethinking forestry values

Letter by Terry Lowrey, Nelson, BC
BC Local News
February 4, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

…In our valley (Nelson), smoke is becoming more prevalent. In winter wood stoves continually belch out a toxic brew especially when choked down and burning inefficiently. Fire mitigation now smokes out spring and fall. Campfires from provincial parks and forest fires fill in the summer months. Factor in private property owners burning green slash from wind events like that of Jan. 13 and it is getting seriously unhealthy around here. …I wish we could re-imagine our burning addiction and consider alternatives like leaving small material on the ground. Pile but don’t burn slash, or mulch and allow to decompose. This locks up the carbon rather than dumping it into the atmosphere. Encourage heat pump use, they are cheaper than burning wood and healthier. Establish smoke free zones in campgrounds. Public cigarettes smoking isn’t acceptable and neither should other types of smoke be.

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Pinnacle Renewable Energy Receives Notice of Alberta OHS Regulatory Charges

By Pinnacle Renewable Energy Inc.
Cision Newswire
January 25, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

VANCOUVER, BC — Pinnacle Renewable Energy announced it has received notice of regulatory charges laid by Alberta Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) following their investigation of the explosion which resulted in injuries at the Company’s plant in Entwistle, AB on February 11, 2019. …Pinnacle’s Chief Executive Officer Duncan Davies… “We regret the impact of this incident on those who were injured, their co-workers and the Entwistle community.” Pinnacle cooperated fully with OHS, and other government agencies during the investigation to understand the unique circumstances leading up to the incident. …The Entwistle plant resumed operations on March 29, 2019 following approval from OHS and local authorities. The Company has not yet received any details or basis for the charges.

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Residential wood burning one of main human sources of air pollution

By Monique Keiran
Victoria Times Colonist
January 24, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

…Residential wood burning is one of the main human-caused sources of fine-particulate pollution in B.C., particularly during the winter months, when people burn more wood to heat their homes. By some reports, it accounts for up to 15 per cent of this type of air pollution in the province and produces as much as 25 per cent of fine-particle pollution in Metro Vancouver, the Cowichan Valley and other communities where surrounding mountains and temperature inversions trap bad air. …In Duncan, for example, old stoves must be removed when a house is sold, and only up-to-date wood-burning appliances are allowed in new construction. …A 2019 Comox bylaw outright prohibits wood stoves in all construction. And this year, if you use a wood-burning fireplace or stove in your Metro Vancouver home between May 15 and Sept. 15, you could be fined $10,000 for each day you flout the new bylaw. 

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Key takeaways from Wood Pellet Association of Canada’s Belt Dryer Symposium

By Fahimeh Yazdan Panah
Canadian Biomass Magazine
January 20, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The Wood Pellet Association of Canada, in co-operation with the BC Forest Safety Council, WorkSafeBC and media partner Canadian Biomass, held the Belt Dryer Symposium on Nov. 25, 2020. As belt dryers have become more common, the pellet industry has experienced several safety incidents over the past few years. The purpose of the Belt Dryer Safety Symposium was to share the learnings from these incidents and for individual operators to share in-house safe operating procedures with their industry colleagues. The symposium included presentations from all the operators of belt dryers in British Columbia. … Comparisons were done between direct versus indirect energy systems and Bill Laturnus, senior safety advisor at the BC Forest Safety Council, examined the use of process safety bowtie analysis as a means of systematically identifying and managing critical controls. All the incidents that were discussed had occurred in direct-fired dryer systems.

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Sunken barge off Port McNeill to remain until February

By Gor Kurbis
CTV News
January 13, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

COURTENAY, B.C. — A 25-metre barge that sank near the Port McNeill ferry dock last month will likely remain where it rests until early February. The Alaska Plaza was docked at the Port McNeill marina when it ran into difficulties on Dec. 24. The vessel sank, causing the nearby 15-metre Sea Lander barge to break free of its moorings and float into the harbour’s breakwater. …While some contaminants were released from the barge, there are currently no emergent environmental issues. …Adams says the barges… are owned by the Croman Corporation out of White City, Oregon. The company is listed online as a helicopter logging operation. …”It has yet to be determined what the cause was,” Hanan says. …”They had been denied access from Western (Forest) Products to use their docks,” Adams says. “Then they just tied up to our docks. They didn’t ask permission, they just did it,” she says.

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Wood stoves smoking us out

By Rochelle Baker
Castanet Kelowna
January 7, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

…folks in Canada’s small towns and rural communities should be relishing the benefits of fresh, clean air. But rather the opposite is true, said Michael Mehta, a professor of geography and environmental studies at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops, B.C. Many rural residents’ health is at significant risk due to high levels of airborne pollutants from wood-burning stoves, both indoors and out, said Mehta, who specializes in environmental and health risk issues. “People in the rural parts of Canada should have some of the cleanest air in the country,” said Mehta. “But, actually, some have polluted air that is considerably worse than any city, and wood stoves are the main contributor.” It’s not unusual for households in small and rural communities to use wood stoves to heat their homes in the winter months, but they come with detrimental effects to human health and the environment, he said. 

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Logging truck collision closes Highway 97A just south of Enderby

By Jon Manchester
Castanet Kelowna
January 6, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Five patients are being rushed to hospital from the scene of a serious collision on Highway 97A just south of Enderby. BCEHS spokesperson Shannon Miller says the crash required a multi-unit response, including four ground ambulances and two helicopters, which landed at the scene.  “Paramedics are currently still on scene, but are transporting five patients. Two patients are being airlifted by helicopter to hospital in critical condition. Three additional patients are being transported by ground ambulance – two in serious condition and one in stable condition.” It’s believed the airlifted patients are being taken to Kelowna General Hospital, where a Code Orange mass casualty alert has reportedly been issued. [A later update reports] Highway 97A reopened following a serious collision this morning, one kilometre south of Enderby. DriveBC confirms the road has been clear between Canyon and Fortune Roads. No word on the incident at this time. 

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Forest Service Road Safety in Beautiful British Columbia!

Road Trip Mama
January 6, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

I feel so blessed to live in this beautiful place in British Columbia, surrounded by mountains and river areas to explore! However, every year there are tragedies that serve as a reminder that these beautiful places can also be deadly. If you are traveling on a Forest Service Road (FSR) then there are a few basic things you should know when going. First of all, FSRs usually exist because of logging, hydro, or other industrial traffic needing to access the area. These companies often deactivate the roads when they are finished, either by blocking access with gates and boulders, or by adding cross ditches that most vehicles cannot make it through. The main thing to remember is that the industrial traffic always has the right of way. [This] is a brochure from BC Forest Safe with some great tips and planning information for traveling on Forestry Road.

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Collision between Ford F-350, logging truck sheds light on backroad safety

By Corey Bullock
The Nelson Star
December 30, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

A recent collision between a logging truck and a Ford F-350 on a forest service road near Invermere is shining a light on the importance of backroad safety and communication in B.C. …Search and Rescue, contracting companies and locals calling for the use of radios on active forest service/resource roads. No one was injured in this particular incident, according to reports. FSRs and RRs are primarily used by industrial vehicles. As the Province of B.C. website states, these roads are used for vehicles engaged in mining, forestry, oil and gas or agriculture operations. They also provide access to many recreational opportunities. …“Logging trucks are all talking to one another. If you’re in a little car and the trucks don’t know you’re there, they will come barrelling down the road. And they have the right of way,” Rizzardo said.

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Free ‘forest baths’ meant to reduce pandemic-related stress for B.C. health care workers

By Kevin Griffin
Vancouver Sun
December 8, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Ronna Schneberger

Free ‘forest baths’ are being prescribed for stressed-out health care workers. The B.C. Parks Foundation hopes to provide 90-minute guided sessions for as many as 10,000 health care workers in B.C. starting in January. The idea is inspired by the Japanese practice of shinrin-yoku or forest bathing. Research has shown that walking in nature results in medically recognized improvements in immune function and stress reduction. The foundation, which recently raised $1.7 million to save West Ballenas Island in the Salish Sea, has a goal of raising $250,000 from the public for the forest-bathing program, said Andrew Day, the foundation’s CEO. Donations are set at $25 which covers the cost of one session for one health care worker. Nature guides are donating a portion of their time to support the gift. Day said, “It’s for specific gratitude to B.C. health care professions and to our parks.  Both of those things have kept British Columbians healthy.”

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Former BC pro hockey player frustrated with COVID-deniers after horrific bout with virus

By Thom Barker
BC Local News
December 2, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Haleigh Callison

A 36-year-old, former professional hockey player from Smithers is sharing her personal experience of battling a severe case of COVID-19. Haleigh Callison hoped going public would … help quiet at least some of the pandemic-denial… when she saw recent social media posts by people claiming the pandemic was just a hoax or no worse than the regular flu, she was prompted to act …Callison tested positive for COVID-19 on Nov. 10. …She said she was extremely sick for a total of two weeks with symptoms including: throwing up, constant nausea, body aches and pains, diarrhea, headaches, loss of appetite, scary and bad thoughts and dreams, trouble sleeping. …As a lumber trader with Olympic Industries in Vancouver, she said fortunately her job lends itself to working from home… “I’m really fortunate, my company is very supportive and ultimately made it clear I have to take care of myself before anything else,” she said.

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October 2020 – Shift Into Winter – Winter Driving Safety

BC Forest Safety Council
November 16, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

The winter driving season is fast approaching! The Shift Into Winter safety campaign is an annual event that reminds all drivers what they can do to prepare to be safe on snowy and icy roads.  Review the following information (17 tips in total) and share it with your co-workers.

Prepare Yourself
1.    Check the current road conditions and weather forecast. Use the DriveBC.ca website to check conditions. Do a risk assessment and ask yourself – is it safe to go?

2.    Plan your route. Avoid any roads that may become dangerous during bad weather. Use a check-in system and provide details on your route and planned arrival time.

Prepare Your Vehicle
1.    Install winter tires. Use four matched winter tires that carry the mountain/snowflake winter tire symbol and with tread no less than 3.5 mm – even for 4 X 4 vehicles. Tires marked with an M+S (Mud and Snow) are also acceptable but do not provide the same degree of performance. Consider studded tires if you are regularly driving on icy roads.

2.    Get your car winter ready with a maintenance check up. Preventative maintenance is key. Change your wipers to winter blades, they are heavier to handle snow and ice.

Drive for the Conditions
1.    Maintain a safe following distance. Look ahead and keep plenty of distance between you and other vehicles (at least 4 seconds). This will allow plenty of room in situations where you may need to brake suddenly. Leave more space when visibility is poor.

2.    Drop your speed to match road conditions. The posted speed is the maximum speed under ideal conditions. In winter, it is safer to drive below the posted speed.

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Firm fined $15K after men crushed to death at B.C. lumber yard

CBC News
November 6, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

A lumber firm has been fined just under $16,000 over the deaths of two workers who were crushed to death at its lumber yard in New Westminster, B.C. Two men, both in their 60s, were killed after being buried beneath a load of lumber at United Gateway Logistics Inc. on Jan. 23, 2016. There were no witnesses to the incident and it was left to investigators to figure out what had happened. Nearly five years later, WorkSafeBC has finished its investigation into the incident. It said the men had been replacing broken straps on a bundle of lumber, which was beneath a number of other bunches of wood. The entire stack toppled and fell on the workers, who were later identified as Yun Zhao Yang, 60, and Guiming Chen, 65. Both died at the scene. WorkSafe BC found multiple stacks across the lumber yard weren’t stable.

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COVID-19 outbreak reported at Grande Prairie Norbord

By Erica Fisher
My Grande Prairie Now
November 7, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Two new COVID-19 outbreaks have been reported in the Peace Country. Alberta Health says the Grande Prairie Norbord mill is one, along with what’s referred to as a sport cohort in Fairview. …Alberta has recorded a record 919 COVID-19 cases over the past 24 hours. The province reported the new daily record Saturday, breaking the previous record of around 800 cases set on November 4th. …The city and county, as well as the Municipal Districts of Fairview and Peace are all on the province’s “watch” list, meaning the extension of the 15 person social gathering limit is in place for those communities.

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Track failure led to train derailment in northern B.C.: safety board

The Kelowna Daily Courier
November 4, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

RICHMOND, B.C. – The Transportation Safety Board says a track failure contributed to the derailment of a freight train in northern British Columbia in January. No one was hurt when 34 cars carrying wood pellets on the Canadian National Railway Co. train left the tracks between the communities of Smithers and Terrace. The board’s report on the incident says video and audio evidence from the train strongly suggests a sudden track failure occurred. The report says testing on the same stretch of tracks in July and September 2019 showed the number of “deviations” in the width between the tracks had increased along that section. The agency says the weight and number of railcars travelling on the route sped up the deterioration of the track before the derailment. CN Rail says in a statement it is reviewing the board’s report but has already increased and enhanced its automated track inspection program to detect and improve track conditions.

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COVID Case confirmed at Northwood Pulp Mill

By Veronica Beltran
CKPG Today
October 30, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

PRINCE GEORGE–An employee of a contractor working on a site at Northwood Pulp Mill has tested positive for COVID-19.  Canfor has confirmed the cases saying in a statement, “an employee of a contractor who was working on-site at Northwood Pulp Mill has tested positive for COVID-19. That person is now recovering at home.”  “Contact tracing was immediately conducted, which included Canfor Pulp and contractor employees, and as a result eight people are now in quarantine for 14 days. Cleaning protocols were also put in place quickly.”–Statement by Canfor.  Canfor adds that their “top priority” is the health and safety of their employees, adding that since the start of the pandemic COVID-19 protocols have been in place to help protect employees. [End of Story]

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Highly poisonous death cap mushroom discovered in Comox

By Terry Farrell
Nanaimo News Bulletin
October 28, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

According to provincial forest pathologist Harry Kope (British Columbia Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development), one of the world’s most dangerous mushrooms has been found growing in Comox. “I have been informed that what appears to be Amanita phalloides (Death cap mushroom) has been found fruiting in Comox, close to Filberg Park,” reads the email, sent by Kope to a local community health network. “This is a first finding of the mushroom outside of greater Vancouver and Victoria. “Death cap mushrooms are a high health risk in urbananized environments. Death cap mushrooms are extremely poisonous and closely resemble some edible mushroom from Asia. Eating them may lead to liver and kidney damage, or death. People should educate themselves to keep their children and pets away from this species.”

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16 B.C. firefighters contract COVID-19 through California deployment

By Karin Larsen
CBC News
October 27, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada West

Three British Columbia firefighters who contracted COVID-19 while in California battling wildfires likely spread the virus to 13 colleagues who tested positive after returning to the province. According to B.C. Wildfire Information Officer Forrest Tower, all 16 individuals are under quarantine at a Richmond hotel and one other facility in the city. None are seriously ill. …Tower said it’s not known how the initial three became infected. …U.S. Forest Service’s Stanton Florea says the work done by the Canadians was crucial in helping contain the North Complex fire during a recent wind storm.  “We had 30- to 50-mile-an-hour winds and the line that the crews from Canada helped construct actually held,” he said. “So they did great work for us and it’s very much appreciated.”

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Public Health declares outbreak at New Brunswick sawmill connected to five cases of COVID-19

The Canadian Press in Halifax Today
February 10, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

SAINT JOHN, New Brunswick — J.D. Irving, Limited says five cases of COVID-19 have been reported at one of its sawmills in northern New Brunswick. The lumber company said today the employees at the facility in Saint Leonard, N.B., work in an isolated area of the site, away from the main sawmill. Vice president of sawmills Jerome Pelletier says the area where the infected employees work has been closed for deep cleaning and that contact tracing is underway. The company says all 272 employees at the sawmill will be provided the chance to get tested three times over the next 14 days. J.D. Irving says the five employees who have tested positive for COVID-19 are isolating and that none are in hospital. [END]

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Norbord Inc. fined $65,000 following 2018 worker injury

Northern Ontario Business
February 10, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

Norbord Inc. has been fined $65,000 following a guilty plea stemming from a 2018 incident in which a worker was injured at its engineered wood plant in northwestern Ontario. Located in Barwick, 392 kilometres west of Thunder Bay, the Norbord plant produces oriented strand board (OSB), a type of engineered wood product comprised of layers of adhesives and wood strands. On Oct. 23, 2018, a worker was injured after a machine activated unexpectedly. The Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development found that the machine was not equipped with a guard or other device to prevent a worker from accessing hazardous moving parts. …In addition to the $65,000 fine, Nobord was charged a 25 per cent victim surcharge as required by the Provincial Offences Act, which goes into a provincial government fund to assist victims of crime. Norbord is owned by Vancouver, B.C.-headquartered West Fraser Timber Co Ltd. 

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Concern raised about students’ safety along Vimy Avenue

By Richa Bhosale
The Timmins Daily Press
November 8, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: Canada, Canada East

TIMMINS, Ontario — Having logging trucks rumble down a residential street adjacent to several schools is just a tragedy waiting to happen, say Vimy Avenue residents Liliane and Jim Kelly. …Vimy Avenue, just off Theriault Boulevard, serves as an access point for Eacom Timber Corporation logging trucks. However, the Kellys say it also serves as a regular walking route for students. …Their daughter told The Daily Press… “This is technically a logging road in the middle of a residential and school zone.” …Jim and Liliane Kelly said they know re-routing the trucks is feasible. …When asked about the Kellys’ concerns, Timmins Mayor George Pirie pointed out, “Vimy road has been the truck route to Eacom for maybe 100 years”. …Pirie said he would “certainly welcome” the Kellys if they wished to make a presentation to city council.

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Firefighters Battle an Unseen Hazard: Their Gear Could Be Toxic

By Hiroko Tabuchi
The New York Times
January 26, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States

…Toxic chemicals on the very equipment meant to protect [fire fighter’s] lives could instead be making them gravely ill. This week, Captain Mitchell and other members of the International Association of Fire Fighters, the nation’s largest firefighters’ union, are demanding that union officials take action. They want independent tests of PFAS, the chemicals in their gear, and for the union to rid itself of sponsorships from equipment makers and the chemical industry. …The demands come as the safety of firefighters has become an urgent concern amid the worsening effects of climate change, which bring rising temperatures that prime the nation for increasingly devastating fires. …But over the past three decades, cancer has emerged as the leading cause of death for firefighters across the country, making up 75 percent of active-duty firefighter deaths in 2019. …The chemicals in question are called per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, found in a range of products including fast-food containers and furniture. 

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Furniture’s positive impacts on human health and wellness

By Kenn Busch
Woodworking Network
November 12, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States
…The pandemic is accelerating the conversation about the relationship between our surroundings and our health. …workplaces will change forever; working from home is now a reality for many more people; and we’re all spending more time at home, with few if any visitors. This comes at a time when interior design thought leaders have already been thinking beyond “sustainability,” about the big-picture meaning of “health and wellness.” …Furniture based on composite wood panels has a unique advantage as a climate-healthy material. Composite wood panels begin life as a recycled product, making use wood fiber left over from other wood products, which would otherwise be landfilled or burned. The fiber comes from managed or FSC-certified forests, maintained for peak health and fire prevention. …The wood products industry has an unparalleled and detailed story to tell, far beyond the traditional meanings of “sustainability,” which you can find in full at www.climatepositivenow.org. 

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Wildfire smoke may carry ‘mind-bending’ amounts of fungi and bacteria, scientists say

By Joseph Serna
Los Angeles Times
February 1, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

When wildfires roar through a forest and bulldozers dig into the earth to stop advancing flames, they may be churning more into the air than just clouds of dust and smoke, scientists say. …plumes of smoke that rise on waves of heat during the day and sink into valleys as the night air cools may be transporting countless living microbes that can seep into our lungs or cling to our skin and clothing, according to research published recently in Science. In some cases, researchers fear that airborne pathogens could sicken firefighters or downwind residents. “…there are many trillions of microbes in smoke that haven’t really been incorporated in an understanding … of human health,” said Leda Kobziar, the University of Idaho’s wildland fire science director. “…The diversity of microbes that we’ve found are really mind-bending.”

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Study: Wildfires produced up to half of pollution in US West

By Matthew Brown
The Associated Press in the Longview Daily News
January 11, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

BILLINGS, Mont. — Wildfire smoke accounted for up to half of all health-damaging small particle air pollution in the western U.S. in recent years as warming temperatures fuelled more destructive blazes, according to a study released Monday. Even as pollution emissions declined from other sources … the amount from fires increased sharply, said researchers at Stanford University and the University of California, San Diego. The findings underscore the growing public health threat posed by climate change as it contributes to catastrophic wildfires… Nationwide, wildfires were the source of up to 25% of small particle pollution in some years, the researchers said. …Scientists studying long-term health problems have found correlations between smoke exposure and decreased lung function, weakened immune systems and higher rates of flu. …Pollution expert Dan Jaffe added that it also raises significant questions about how to better manage forests and the role that prescribed burns might play.

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Train cars moving lumber derail after hitting tree on tracks

The Associated Press in the Seattle Times
January 6, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

OREGON CITY, Oregon — A Union Pacific train carrying lumber derailed after hitting a large tree that had fallen on the tracks along Highway 99 between Canby and Oregon City, authorities said. The Clackamas County Sheriff’s Office said three locomotives and 15 rail cars derailed at around 1:30 a.m. Wednesday. The engineer of the train complained of pain, KGW-TV reported. No one else was injured. None of the debris or rail cars blocked the highway, which was temporarily fully closed, KGW-TV reported. The Oregon Department of Transportation said one southbound lane of Highway 99 near South End Road would remain closed for up to two days. 

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Prescribed fires may mean safer smoke

By Casey Crownhart
Scienceline
December 16, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

…Inhaling wildfire smoke can be harmful, but smoke from unintended wildfires may be worse than smoke from prescribed burns, according to a study published in 2019. That means the health risks from wildfires — like the ones that have destroyed millions of acres and turned the sky blood orange this fall in California, Oregon and Washington — might be prevented by implementing prescribed burns.  … In a study published in the journal Allergy in 2019 [researchers] at Stanford University found that children who lived near where a wildfire occurred suffered more severe respiratory and immune effects than those who lived near a prescribed burn. It’s an important comparison because prescribed burns are a crucial tool for reducing wildfire risk. And while support for prescribed burns has increased in recent years as wildfires have worsened, there is still plenty of skepticism from the public about burn safety.

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Family of man who died at Columbia Forest Products mill sues company

By Becca Robbins
Herald and News
November 7, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

Frankie Crispen

The family of a Klamath Falls man who died gruesomely in 2017 while working at the Columbia Forest Products mill has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the company. Kay Moyette, the mother of Francis “Frankie” Crispen, is suing the mill for nearly $5.5 million after Crispen, 28, fell into a vat of scalding, corrosive liquid on Nov. 17, 2017 while he was repairing an electrical cord that operates a motor at the mill. The complaint alleges Columbia failed to install the proper safety equipment, such as guard rails or other fall protection, that could have prevented Crispen’s death. An OSHA investigation into his death completed in May 2018 led to $17,500 in fines for Columbia after finding multiple safety violations, including holes in the vat cover and not providing safer access to the area.

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Over 200 Forest Service fire personnel have tested positive for COVID-19

By Bill Gabbert
Wildfire Today
November 5, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

At least 219 U.S. Forest Service personnel involved in firefighting have tested positive for COVID-19 so far this year, according to Stanton Florea, a Fire Communications Specialist for the agency. Since early March, 141 employees of the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection have tested positive, said Alisha Herring, Education, Outreach, and Engagement Officer for the agency on November 5. Jim Gersbach, Public Information Officer for the Oregon Department of Forestry, told Wildfire Today that “among all wildland firefighters in Oregon this summer – not just ODF personnel — seven tested positive.” …For the most part wildland firefighters have adapted to the reality of working with the continuing threat of COVID-19. …Fire officials are discovering that some of the measures might continue to be used after the pandemic since they can enhance efficiency and productivity.

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Thousands Forced to Evacuate, Two Firefighters Injured by California Fires

By Ana Facio-Krajcer, Will Wright and Johnny Diaz
The New York Times
October 27, 2020
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US West

IRVINE, California — Two firefighters were gravely injured and tens of thousands of Californians were forced to flee their homes on Monday as two new fires ripped through Orange County. About 90,800 residents in Irvine were put under mandatory evacuation orders because of the Silverado Fire and the smaller Blue Ridge Fire, said Shane Sherwood, a division chief for the Orange County Fire Authority. High winds and low humidity fueled the fires’ rapid growth. The two injured firefighters, ages 26 and 31, were intubated after receiving second- and third-degree burns across most of their bodies in the Silverado Fire, according to a statement from the Orange County Fire Authority. “They’re gravely injured,” Chief Brian Fennessy said. “Their families are with them.”

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South Carolina pellet mill faces $15K fine more than a year after Department of Health and Environmental Control says it broke pollution laws

By Lana Ferguson
Hilton Head Island Packet
January 28, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: United States, US East

The Jasper County wood pellet mill that neighbors say emitted toxins that made them sick — and broke federal and state environmental regulations requiring permits— agreed to pay the state $15,000 in fines, according to documents obtained by The Island Packet. The fine, which could have been $10,000 for every day the mill operated in violation, comes more than a year after a surprise onsite inspection … found Jasper Pellets LLC in Ridgeland had constructed new equipment without obtaining the proper permit or notifying the agency that it had started construction. The consent order ends the state’s disputes with the pellet mill plant, which began operating in 2010 and was purchased by Jasper Pellets in October 2018. The plant turns raw wood into compressed pellets that are typically shipped overseas to be used as power plant fuel. That process can produce smog and soot that the neighbors say have wrecked their health.

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The great wood burning stove debate

By Pippa Neill
Air Quality News
February 5, 2021
Category: Health & Safety
Region: International

…According to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, wood and coal fires are the single biggest source of particulate matter (PM2.5) pollution in the UK. …Yet despite the carcinogenic properties of these particles, lighting up a wood burning stove or an open fire remains hugely popular, indeed an estimated 175,000 wood burners are sold in the UK every year. …In recent years, the discourse around wood burning stoves has focused on them being a more environmentally-friendly option when it comes to heating your home. …This lack of clear communication goes beyond the CO2 impacts of wood burning stoves, but also extends to their air pollution impact. …a new Ecodesign compliant stove it will produce on average 90% less emissions than an open fire, and 80% less emissions than the average 10-year–old stove. …There is a gap in information when it comes to wood-burning stoves and, as shown, the debate remains to be very heated

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