Strickland told Canadian Occupational Safety he believes there is a “good likelihood” that safety training harmonization will be in place across a few provinces by year‑end, with more jurisdictions potentially joining once the benefits become clearer to workers and project owners. He characterized that view as both “realistic and optimistic” considering the political momentum now behind the file.
For health and safety leaders, the prospect of concrete progress within 12 months will be notable. Many have seen previous harmonization discussions falter amid constitutional realities and entrenched provincial regimes. Labour and occupational health and safety laws are largely provincially regulated and have developed independently over many years, a situation legal experts have described as a “heavy legislative lift” to change.
Strickland acknowledges that challenge and stresses the process is still at an early stage. “We’re not anywhere near the finish line yet,” he said, adding that the current phase should be understood as the beginning of a longer journey rather than a near‑term overhaul. At the same time, he argues that the level of governmental support is unlike anything he has seen in more than 40 years in construction.
New political backing and a formal union endorsement
That political backing is being translated into concrete work through the Canadian Association of Administrators of Labour Legislation (CAALL), which held a national meeting on safety harmonization in the fall and has another planned for the spring. Strickland says recent discussions have generated “serious momentum,” with indications of buy‑in from several jurisdictions that could move first.
Organized labour has now formally aligned itself with that effort. CBTU’s Canadian Executive Board recently passed a unanimous resolution endorsing Ontario Labour Minister David Piccini’s leadership role in the harmonization project. The resolution supports an Ontario‑ and Nova Scotia‑led national push to streamline safety certifications across jurisdictions.
Piccini, who was designated by premiers and labour ministers to lead the initiative nationally, has been promoting the project publicly. On Wednesday he met with industry leaders at the Canadian Construction Safety Council Secretariat in Montréal, later posting on social media that he was “honoured to speak” to the group and thanking CCSC Chair Philippe Adam for his leadership. He framed the initiative as “raising the bar and lowering the barriers,” describing it as a “new vision for health and safety harmonization and improved labour mobility” that will help skilled workers move more easily between provinces, strengthen protections on job sites and support “nation‑building projects that connect communities across Canada.”
In a statement to Canadian Occupational Safety, Piccini’s office said: “Ontario is advancing work to harmonize core health and safety training and bring a pan‑Canadian policy proposal forward to labour ministers across the country. The goal is the harmonization of health and safety certifications, cutting duplication so qualified workers can get to job sites sooner and employers can fill urgent roles faster.”
Seven priority programs in harmonization’s first phase
Behind that rhetoric, CBTU and its partners have identified a first tranche of specific training and certification areas where harmonized standards are being prioritized: