
A clear emergency response plan helps protect workers, residents, clients, and visitors during a workplace emergency. It can help reduce confusion, speed response time, and guide people on what to do when every second matters.
In long-term care and home support, emergencies can take many forms. These may include wildfire, earthquake, fire, flood, power outage, medical emergency, chemical or drug exposure, biohazard cleanup, extreme weather, air pollution, communication loss, or loss of water supply.
Whether you are a front-line worker or part of the leadership team, everyone has a role in emergency preparedness.
Employers are responsible for planning and preparing for workplace emergencies. A strong emergency response plan helps people respond safely and in an organized way. It can help save lives, prevent or reduce injuries, and protect property and operations from further harm.
It also helps workers know what to expect. When people understand the plan, where to go, who to contact, and what steps to take, there is less panic and less confusion during an emergency.
Workers need to know their organization's emergency response plan and be trained on how to respond safely. They should understand:
Leaders play a key role in ensuring emergency response planning is practical, comprehensive, and understood across the workplace. This includes,
Emergency response planning should not happen in isolation. Under the OHS Regulation, employers must involve the joint health and safety committee (JOHSC), worker representative, or other workers when developing key parts of the emergency response plan, including those related to hazardous substances.
Workers bring direct knowledge of day-to-day risks, routines, and challenges. Their input can help make the plan more practical and easier to follow in a real emergency.
eLearning
This course familiarizes you with the WHMIS 2015 system and its workplace use. Learning about WHMIS 2015 is part of the knowledge you need to protect yourself and your co-workers from hazardous products.
An emergency response plan is a workplace plan that outlines what to do before, during, and after an emergency. It helps workers and leaders respond safely and clearly.
Everyone in the workplace should know the plan. Workers need to understand what to do in an emergency, and leaders need to make sure the plan is in place, communicated, and reviewed regularly.
The plan should reflect the risks in your workplace. Examples may include fire, earthquake, wildfire, flood, power outage, medical emergency, chemical exposure, biohazard cleanup, extreme weather, or communication loss.
Workers understand the workplace, the daily routines, and the risks. Their input can help make the plan more practical and easier to follow in a real emergency. Be sure to also consult your Joint occupational health and safety committee.
Workers should be trained on emergency procedures, communication methods, evacuation routes, muster stations, emergency equipment, and who to contact during an emergency.
Review and update your emergency response plan during annual reviews, when deficiencies are identified, when workplace changes occur, and when regulatory changes are made.
Yes. You should conduct emergency drills at least once a year and after any significant change to the emergency response plan for the workplace. Some examples of emergency drills include: fire, earthquake, and first-aid drills.
SafeCare BC offers general occupational health and safety consultation. This can include reviewing and supporting the development of an emergency preparedness plan.
You can find them on the WorkSafeBC website in the OHS Regulation, sections 4.13 to 4.18, along with the related guidelines.
Yes. Organizations can contact us at info@safecarebc.ca for support with creating an emergency response plan or with emergency preparedness questions.
Reach out to us at info@safecarebc.ca for support with emergency preparedness planning, including review and development support for your emergency preparedness plan.
Information on regulatory requirements for emergency preparedness and response can be found in the WorkSafeBC Occupational Health and Safety Regulation, sections 4.13 to 4.18, and the related guidelines.