Troy Winters and Wes Payne | CUPE Health & Safety and Communications

Ban asbestosIn mid-2014, the Harper  government’s omnibus budget Bill C-31 added language to the Hazardous Products Act (HPA). Rather than banning asbestos, the additions to the HPA explicitly laid out how asbestos can be sold in or imported to Canada if certain minimal requirements were met. Many products containing asbestos, like car brake linings and pads, are still regularly imported into Canada, with imports of asbestos products to Canada actually on the rise.

Meanwhile, Health Canada has removed references that downplayed the risk of exposure to asbestos, making their new apparent stance on asbestos much stronger, and more closely aligned with World Health Organization standards. The new language removes suggestions that chrysotile asbestos (the type of asbestos the government previously defended as safer) was “less potent”, and that “significant quantities” need to be inhaled to be dangerous. These changes put the Harper government’s continued public support for the substance in a particularly poor light.

Though Health Canada’s change in position is welcome, these changes alone are not a solution to protect workers. The real issue lies in both federal and provincial regulations, which are often weak or go unenforced, leaving workers at risk. Without stronger regulations and better enforcement, asbestos will continue to be a problem for workers.

Asbestos continues to make CUPE members sick. Members working in maintenance (general, electrical, plumbing, HVAC etc.) are at higher risk. Even after materials are removed, they go to landfills that are poorly setup to deal with large-scale disposal. As a result, workers get exposed when bags get ripped open or resurface after they have been buried.

CUPE continues to call for an outright ban on the import, export, or use of asbestos within Canada, along with just transition programs that see an equitable shift away from the use of asbestos with jobs or training for those who continue to live in areas affected by the asbestos mine closures. Furthermore, CUPE calls on our government to actively support the inclusion of chrysotile asbestos to the hazardous chemical list covered by the United Nations Rotterdam Convention. Inclusion of asbestos in the convention would help protect workers both here in Canada and abroad by making it more difficult to import and export the deadly product.

“The legacy of harm caused by asbestos is significant,” said CUPE National Secretary-Treasurer Charles Fleury, “it’s the largest cause of workplace death in Canada and we know there is asbestos in many schools, hospitals and public buildings where CUPE members work. The continued import of these pro­ducts will harm workers for decades.”