CBTU Unanimously Pass Resolution to Harmonize National Safety Certification Standards for Canada’s Skilled Tradespeople

January 12, 2026

Canada’s Building Trades Unions (CBTU) joined by Ontario Premier Doug Ford and Ontario’s Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development, David Piccini, announce a collaborative effort to harmonize national safety standards for construction workers by adopting best practices and the highest standards to ensure work is performed safely. This initiative marks a significant step toward national unity in certifications across Canada.

At a recent board meeting in Ottawa, CBTU’s Canadian Executive Board unanimously passed a resolution underscoring the strong commitment of both the Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development, David Piccini, and CBTU and their affiliates.

Led by Minister Piccini, who was recently designated by provincial Premiers and labour ministers across the country to lead this critical national initiative, the resolution aims to support Canada’s construction workers by dismantling barriers that prevent them from easily moving between provinces to work on projects. This move addresses the challenge of varying health and safety certification standards across Canada, recognizing that interprovincial recertification costs time, money, and causes unnecessary delays to critical project progression.

As CBTU endeavours to ensure our members can work on infrastructure projects from coast-to-coast, this resolution is a decisive step. It streamlines certification processes and champions transformative policies, ensuring Canada’s unionized skilled tradespeople are job-ready, rigorously trained to consistent safety standards, and eligible to contribute to nation-building projects and propel our economy forward.

By breaking down existing safety certification barriers, CBTU and the Ontario Ministry of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development envision an aligned workforce capable of fully participating in Canada’s infrastructure efforts, improving productivity and promoting the highest level of health and safety standards for workers across the country, fostering a truly national approach to skilled trades certification.

“The unanimous approval of this resolution reflects CBTU and our affiliates’ unwavering dedication to our brothers and sisters working to build Canada,” stated Sean Strickland, Executive Director of Canada’s Building Trades Unions. “To ensure our members can be where the work is, we must streamline safety certifications between provinces, to uphold the highest standard of safety, while creating opportunities that put our members to work. Harmonizing health and safety certifications across the country is critical to ensuring our workforce is appropriately trained to consistent safety standards, ready to deliver on nation-building projects safely and efficiently.”

“By strengthening and working to align health and safety standards across Canada, we’re raising the bar and lowering the barriers that hold back growth,” said David Piccini, Minister of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development. “Working with our partners nationwide, these efforts will create safer workplaces, support a more agile workforce, and help Ontario deliver the nation-building projects that drive long-term economic growth.”

Source

Related Articles


Latest Articles


Changing Scene

  • ABB Chosen to Supply Technology for BC Ferries’ New Major Vessels

    ABB Chosen to Supply Technology for BC Ferries’ New Major Vessels

    January 12, 2026 ABB will supply a complete package of power, propulsion and control technology for four new double-ended passenger and car ferries operated by British Columbia Ferry Services (BC Ferries). One of the largest ferry operators in the world, BC Ferries provides year-round vehicle and passenger service on 25 routes to 47 terminals, carrying Read More…

  • Federal Government Invests in Four Ontario Steel Companies

    Federal Government Invests in Four Ontario Steel Companies

    January 12, 2026 Through targeted investments, the Government of Canada is committed to providing support to help businesses in all sectors, including steel and automotive, to respond, adapt and compete amid shifting market conditions. Evan Solomon, Minister of Artificial Intelligence and Digital Innovation and Minister responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario Read More…

  • Craftsman V20 150W Power Inverter Recalled Due to Fire Hazard

    Craftsman V20 150W Power Inverter Recalled Due to Fire Hazard

    January 12, 2026 This recall involves the Craftsman V20 150W Power Inverter (Model number: CMCB1150B). The product has a rectangular prism shape with dimensions of 8.13 x 7.62 x 11.68 cm. It is red and black and weighs 320 grams. It has three charging ports for Type-C, Type-A, and AC connections. It contains an LED Read More…

  • 2025 National Model Codes Now Available

    2025 National Model Codes Now Available

    January 12, 2026 New model codes introduce updates that advance the harmonization of building design and construction requirements across Canada, expand the range of compliance options available to code users, incorporate forward-looking climatic data in building design to help prepare buildings for future climate conditions while reducing the construction sector’s contribution to climate change, and Read More…