Small businesses are the training ground for the Canadian workforce and many young workers have their first real work experiences in a small business. Shockingly, a recent study from the Institute of Work and Health found that only one in five young employees in Canada reported having any safety training on the job.
With a lack of work experience (and in some cases, life experience) young workers are especially vulnerable to having a workplace injury or causing a workplace injury to occur to a co-worker. In Canada, more than half of serious and fatal workplace accidents involving young workers aged 15 – 25 take place within the first six months on the job. Nearly 20% occur during the first month. A young worker without safety training may be an accident waiting to happen.
As an employer, you can’t assume a young worker has any previous knowledge or understanding of safe work practices, or even any awareness of potential risks or dangers that can be present in a workplace. When it comes to a young employee and workplace safety, why not share the information in a way that a young worker can easily understand?
Welcome to Workplace Safety 101!
Some good ideas to include in your Workplace Safety 101 training are:
By making workplace safety training the first and most in-depth training you provide, you could not only avoid a terrible tragedy for a young worker, you could also help instill the values of workplace safety that will last throughout their entire career (and not just for a few fleeting summer months).
At CFIB, we’re proud to support our members with workplace safety and we’d be happy to help you access training materials and resources to help you train a young worker. Help is just a call or click away.