LATEST NEWS
O H & S | Professional Services | Skills Training | Heavy Equipment
July 4, 2008
High-school construction teacher fined after dispute with Ministry of Labour inspector
Sault Ste. Marie
A high school construction co-op teacher has been fined after pleading guilty to an occupational health and safety charge.
Darren McClelland, the lead teacher at a Sault Ste. Marie high school, and former Ministry of Transportation construction inspector, pleaded guilty last Thursday to hindering, obstructing and interfering with a Ministry of Labour investigator. He was fined $1,000 plus costs.
Court heard that a MOL investigator was inspecting a housing project in Sault Ste. Marie on April 17, 2007 when he found six of the eight students on a roof, more than three metres high, were not attached to safety harnesses. McClelland was their onsite teacher-supervisor, and received a warning for the offence.
The students, part of a high school construction co-op program, were working alongside journey tradespeople on the housing project while learning about the construction industry.
The program, which has been in place throughout the Algoma District School Board for about a decade as a partnership between the board and SalDan Developments, integrates students with tradespeople on various job sites.
The same investigator returned to the site for another inspection on June 6, 2007 and saw 10 students on the roof, none of them of them connected to a fall- arrest system.
The students were unloading shingles from a boom truck and loading them on the roof, said defence lawyer Don Orazietti, noting that the instructor believed the fall-arrest system would be more of a hindrance than a safety measure in the process.
“He understands that his view isn’t what the legislation requires,” Orazietti told the court.
The students were ordered off the roof and the teacher’s attempt to explain the situation to the investigator to “give him a break” escalated on the job site.
MOL lawyer Wes Wilson said McClelland began yelling, swearing and shoving the inspector and threw his hard hat to the ground.
Wilson noted that McClelland, in his position of responsibility with the students “ought not be of one breaking government regulations” for students learning about the construction industry.
McClelland was described to the court as a caring teacher who has extensive knowledge about the construction industry and health and safety issues.
Justice of the Peace Sharon Roberson, who accepted the joint submission of the Crown and defence, noted “the bigger issue is the health and safety of young people under your tutelage.”
She noted that young workers often do whatever their employer asks without understanding some of the safety risks involved.
“I’m happy we’re not here dealing with a death or injury of a student,” she said.
Algoma District School Board Director of Education Mario Turco said that the program, which is open to all students across the board, has been a very successful partnership between the board and SalDan Developments and one that is under review for expansion.
The Sault Ste. Marie Construction Association refused comment.
| MOST POPULAR STORIES |
- Korky Koroluk: Melting permafrost gives Canadian North that sinking feeling
- Two workers injured in separate accidents on Ontario’s Skyway Bridge
- Alberta continues to drive Canadian economy
- Volvo Construction Equipment cuts 500 jobs in Goderich
- Anthony Henday Drive ring road garners Canadian Design-Build Institute award
- 20 Most Popular Stories
| CURRENT STORIES |
- PCL Constructors team expands Air Canada Centre
- Debate sidesteps industry issues
- Ontario Realty Corporation registers general contractors, design firms online
- Stantec joins Infusion Health consortium on P3 hospital project
- Commercial banks stand to profit from Black Monday, economist says
- Economist warns U.S. economy on ‘slippery slope of recession’
- Daniels Corp. brings a taste of Chicago to Toronto condo project
- Facility and service managers must be full partners on P3 projects, expert says
- DCN election poll puts Stephen Harper’s Conservatives out in front
- Onni Group makes progress on Carlyle at Victoria Hill project
- Chinook Pipelines returns to court later this month in Pincher Creek case
| ALEX’S BLOG |

Reed Construction Data Chief Economist Alex Carrick discusses current developments in Canada's economic environment. He also shares light-hearted reflections on life and current events.
Economics Blog More 
- Huge Potential for Commercial Banks from Black Monday (October 3, 2008)
- Black Monday was Nasty for the U.S. and Canada (October 2, 2008)
- A 13-Step Action Plan to Fix the Financial Mess (September 30, 2008)
Lifestyle Blog More 
- Three Cities with a Lot in Common: Calgary, Edmonton and Venice (September 29, 2008)
- How to Get Ahead in this Life (September 25, 2008)
| PROJECT NEWS BRIEFS |
Updates on Canadian construction projects from Reed Construction Data’s research team. More 
- Viljoen Architects readies working drawings for Stonebridge by the Bay (Sep 15, 2008)
- REC Silicon plans $1.2-billion manufacturing plant in Quebec (Sep 15, 2008)
- Construction underway at Interfor’s Adams Lake sawmill (Sep 11, 2008)
- Alcan moves closer to construction of Kitimat aluminum smelter (Sep 11, 2008)
- Town of Oliver presses on with plans for wine village (Sep 11, 2008)
