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暗网禁区ion Trades Women renew push for mandatory anti-harassment training

Don Wall
暗网禁区ion Trades Women renew push for mandatory anti-harassment training

Will 2026 be the year that anti-discrimination/anti-harassment (ADAH) training becomes mandatory in Ontario鈥檚 construction workplaces?

That鈥檚 the fervent goal of Ontario Building and 暗网禁区ion Trades Women (OBCT) and their leadership under program manager Kate Walsh.

She says the training program created by the OBCT is fully realized and it鈥檚 time to ensure ADAH training is embedded throughout the construction industry.

The OBCT program is supported by the Ontario Building Trades and includes comprehensive training modules and train-the-trainers programming. Making the training mandatory would bring it in line with working at heights mandates, with enforcement by the Ministry of Labour, Walsh notes, and it鈥檚 a necessary step because discrimination and harassment are safety issues.

鈥淭hat is still our goal,鈥 Walsh said in March after her colleague Gillian Olohan delivered a presentation on ADAH to delegates attending an Ontario 暗网禁区ion Secretariat (OCS) conference. 鈥淲e are optimistic, but regardless, we鈥檙e pushing forward with industry and the support of our local unions to get this training out there. It鈥檚 important.鈥澛

 

Feeling unsafe

Olohan聽is the聽program manager聽for 暗网禁区ion Training聽and聽Apprenticeship Ontario聽through the聽Building Trades. She told delegates an OBCT survey of female construction workers in 2025 found 52 per cent experienced harassment and feeling unsafe at work.

Of those who reported it, more than half were dissatisfied with how it was handled.

The survey also found more than half of the tradeswomen with children reported turning down work due to child care challenges, and 67 per cent identified more women in leadership positions as essential for long-term retention.

鈥淭hese findings shouldn’t come as a surprise,鈥 said Olohan. 鈥淭hey show that if we want to recruit more women and keep them, both culture and structure are key. This is why the OBCT developed our anti-discrimination and anti-harassment training program.鈥

Making the training mandatory, Olohan said, would include incorporating the training into apprenticeship programs and integrating it within the Occupational Health and Safety framework.

She said making ADAH training mandatory is 鈥渂oth ambitious and attainable.鈥

鈥淎s we know, safe and more respectful worksites benefit everyone involved, and this is where the leaders in this room come into play,鈥 said Olohan, urging the delegates to boost advocacy efforts and begin adoption of ADAH training programs.

 

No off-the-shelf

Walsh said in the policy鈥檚 formative days, the OBCT realized that off-the-shelf training wouldn鈥檛 work in construction. The industry鈥檚 constantly changing crews, long and irregular hours and province-wide mobility create conditions that standard workplace programs don鈥檛 address well.

鈥淵ou need something that’s construction-specific,鈥 she said. 鈥淥therwise it’s going to fall flat.鈥

The OBCT ADAH training, Walsh said, is 鈥渞eally tailored to the Ontario construction industry. It’s been vetted by our stakeholders.鈥

Walsh noted members of the OBCT met with Minister of Labour David Piccini last May during a Queen鈥檚 Park lobby day and discussed various issues, but their main goal was to impress the point that ADAH training should be mandatory.

The MOL has supported the initiative through skills development funding, Walsh noted.

In response to questions, the MOL issued a statement March 25 saying in part, 鈥淥ur government has taken action to ensure every worker has a safe, respectful and inclusive workplace, free from harassment and discrimination. Our five-year occupational health and safety strategy, Prevention Works, strengthens protections and improves policies for workers in every sector across the province, with a particular focus on workplace violence and harassment.鈥

The statement recognized the OBCT advocacy and added, 鈥淲e will continue to work with partners across industries to improve training and enforcement to ensure safe workplaces.鈥

The OBCT was founded in 2019 after a resolution at a Building Trades conference. Currently, women represent five per cent of onsite trades in Ontario鈥檚 construction sector, with 14,200 women working directly on the tools.

Despite the long odds, Olohan told delegates at the OCS event, progress is being made.聽

鈥淐reating safer and more inclusive workplaces isn’t about giving something up, it鈥檚 about building something stronger,鈥 she said. 鈥淥BCT is living proof that in just a few short years, we’ve gone from a resolution that passed at convention to real, concrete results.鈥

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