On March 11 of last year, occupational health and safety suddenly became a hot topic in every business when the World Health Organization declared the COVID-19 virus a global pandemic. Many organizations, including our own, had to scramble to understand the risks and adapt. 

In 2021, employers will continue to pivot to address new information and changing restrictions to keep workers safe and operations running.

Beyond critical front-line medical workers, Canadians have been introduced to the important roles other essential workers play in sustaining our economy and supply chain — from grocery store workers and infrastructure employees to production staff manufacturing crucial goods such as food, medicine and toilet paper.

As we rethink our assumptions around offshore production and supply, the health and safety of our essential workforce has become an important ongoing consideration — not only in caring for our people, but in ensuring our economic sustainability.

So what’s changed? COVID-19 has shifted the world of workplace safety in profound ways. The focus on employee safety will continue to grow as global regulations change in response to the evolving pandemic.

The pandemic has many organizations questioning long-standing norms about the way we work and how we safeguard and care for the health and well-being of staff.

One of the greatest impacts for OH&S as a result of COVID-19 has been a new emphasis on the health in health and safety.

In manufacturing and other sectors, employers have had to address the very real issue of communicable disease prevention in the workplace beyond annual flu shot campaigns.

There is a growing need to provide supports that address the impact of fear and anxiety on workers’ ability to report to work or focus on the job.

We have also seen a shift away from detection towards prevention in health and safety efforts. The potential impact of an outbreak in the plant created new urgency for employers to identify and address hazards before someone is injured or made ill.

While the pandemic will eventually end, the lessons learned will live on. A continued focus on exposure control plans and the prevention of workplace infections will have benefits for industry well beyond COVID-19.

Employees are demanding more of their employers.

The impacts of the pandemic, along with the social and economic challenges of 2020, have many workers re-evaluating what they look for in a workplace.

When evaluating potential employers, workers are looking for:

Companies that build and maintain effective systems to protect workers — their most valuable resource — will be better positioned to succeed in the economic recovery ahead.

Into 2021 and Beyond

As we move into a post-pandemic “normal,” the most successful companies in navigating the recovery will be those that:

Threats to business continuity and success in a sustained crisis challenge our core beliefs and values.

Your workers are watching to see how you respond. Put their safety in the forefront to meet the crisis together.