If you raise an occupational health and safety issue, refuse unsafe work, carry out any required health and safety related duties, testify in a proceeding about a health and safety matter, or provide others with information about health and safety matters, neither your employer nor your union can take any prohibited (retaliatory) action against you.
A prohibited action includes any act or omission by an employer or union, or a person acting on behalf of an employer or union that negatively affects a term or condition of your employment or your membership in a union.
Examples of prohibited action include:
A worker can also make a complaint if an employer fails to pay wages while a worker engages in certain activities relating to occupational health and safety matters, such as attending a health and safety meeting, for example.
If you think you have experienced prohibited action relating to occupational health and safety, you should contact the WorkSafeBC office nearest to you. You will be asked to give some of the details of the complaint as well as a telephone number in order for a Prevention Officer to contact you.
If your complaint is against your employer, you should talk to your union. You may have rights under your collective agreement which will offer a better result than that which you would obtain under the prohibited action process. If your complaint is against your union, you should talk to WorkSafeBC directly.
It is critical to keep in mind the following strict time limits:
Each case turns on its own facts, but the following types of evidence may be relevant in supporting your claim:
Workers have an obligation to mitigate (lessen) their losses if the employment relationship has ended. This documentary evidence is critical when seeking a period of wage loss.
Complaints can be resolved by mediation or adjudication.
Mediation is a meeting between you and your employer and a neutral third party called the mediator. The purpose of mediation is to resolve the complaint outside of the formal decision-making process. Mediation is a confidential, “off the record” process. This means that if there is no settlement and the adjudication goes ahead, nothing said at mediation can be used in the adjudication.
The mediation process is generally faster than the formal adjudication process and provides parties the opportunity to have some say in the outcome of the complaint. As mediation is a confidential process, the parties are able to propose settlement options that may not be available through the formal adjudication process.
If Mediation does not result in settlement, the file will be returned to the Associate General Counsel Department, and go through the formal adjudication process. No information from Mediation will go forward to the Associate General Counsel Department.
Once the Associate General Counsel Department receives the file they will contact the employer first to request a submission in response to the worker’s original Prohibited Action Complaint form (and any additional evidence provided at that time). The worker will be provided an opportunity to respond to the employer’s submission and provide any additional evidence at that time.
Adjudication is a formal decision making process. The Legal Adjudicative Officer (LAO) will review and weigh all evidence submitted and issue a written decision regarding whether or not there was a prohibited action and a decision regarding remedy entitlement. These decisions are appealable to the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Tribunal.
If WorkSafeBC rules that there was a prohibited action against you, they can order the employer (or in some cases, the union) to:
The Worker’s Advisors Office is independent of WorkSafeBC. Under the Workers Compensation Act, the Workers’ Advisers Office may provide a worker with representation only if their claim has merit, or put another way, a reasonable chance of success. A Workers' Adviser will assess the merits of the case for each step of the process to determine if representation is appropriate.
The Workers’ Advisers Office cannot provide advice or representation on any matters beyond the scope of the Workers Compensation Act. For example, we cannot give you advice on:
Also, the employer may want you to sign a “General Release of Claims” as part of the settlement. We cannot give you advice on the effect of such releases, with one exception. Workers cannot waive their right to file or continue with a compensation claim with WorkSafeBC. If a release contains such a term, the term has no effect, but the rest of the release may be valid.
This factsheet has been prepared for general information purposes. It is not a legal document. Please refer to the Workers Compensation Act and the Occupational Health and Safety Regulation for purposes of interpretation and application of the law.