This article was provided by the Ontario Mining Association (OMA), an organization that was established in 1920 to represent the mining industry of the province.
While statistics can’t always tell the whole story, recent numbers indicate Ontario’s mining sector is making further progress on the safety front. For the first three months of 2013, the provincial mining sector had a lost time injury frequency of 0.2 per 200,000 hours worked. This compares with a rate of 0.4 for the first three months of 2012 – a 50% improvement.
This new level of safety performance by the sector was achieved by more than 18,300 men and women working more than 9.3 million hours at mine sites across the province during the quarter. For the same period in 2013, a total medical aid frequency of 4.4 per 200,000 hours worked was achieved compared with a rate of 4.8 for the first three months of 2012 – an 8.3% improvement.
For all of 2012, mining’s lost time injury rate was 0.5, a gain from 0.6 per 200,000 hours worked in 2011. The industry’s previous best lost time injury rate over a quarterly, or yearly, period was 0.4. The industry’s total medical injury rate for all of 2012 was 5.5, which was up slightly from 5.3 in 2011. In 2012, approximately 18,700 employees at mine sites in Ontario worked a total of more than 38.3 million hours.