Sections 4.27 to 4.31 of the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation cover violence in the workplace. The regulation requires employers to complete a risk assessment where there is a risk to workers from violence arising outside of their employment. This includes the spillover of domestic violence.
The employer must also create policies and procedures to eliminate or minimize those risks and inform workers of the policies, procedures and risks in the workplace.
The employer must tell employees about people they are likely to encounter in the course of their work who have a history of violent behaviour.
If a worker is experiencing domestic violence at home, managers should connect them with helpful resources such as employee and family assistance providers or Worksafe BC.
If you have been, or suspect you may be, the victim of a crime, speak with a service worker from VictimLinkBC.
The effects of domestic violence often extend outside the home. Domestic violence can enter the workplace in many ways.
Some examples of the ways domestic violence can threaten to enter the workplace include:
If domestic violence threatens to enter the workplace, the employer must comply with the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation. They must:
Resources are available through AskMyHR if the issue of domestic violence is brought to your attention by an employee or if you believe an employee may be experiencing domestic violence. In addition to the flowchart below, the WorkSafeBC Domestic Violence in the Workplace Toolkit provides more information.
The above chart is also available as a downloadable PDF: