When it comes to health and safety, everyone in the workplace has distinct responsibilities. Whether you're an owner, employer, supervisor, prime contractor, or worker, you have a role to play in keeping the workplace safe. As a worker, you have rights to a safe and healthy workplace, which includes the right to refuse unsafe work.
Everyone has a role to play in workplace safety. The following table shows the various role and responsibilities of all who are involved.
On a worksite, the owner is ultimately responsible for health and safety. In many cases, the owner is also in the role of employer. If you’re both the owner of the workplace and the employer, you must meet your responsibilities for both roles.
Supervisors play a key role with very specific health and safety responsibilities that need to be understood.
A supervisor is a person who instructs, directs, and controls workers in the performance of their duties. A supervisor can be any worker — management or staff — who meets this definition, whether or not he or she has the supervisor title. If someone in the workplace has a supervisor's responsibilities, that person is responsible for worker health and safety.
On a worksite, everyone has varying levels of responsibility for workplace health and safety. You should know and understand your responsibilities — and those of others. If you’re a worker, you also have three key rights.
*By law, employers are prohibited from penalizing workers for raising a health and safety issue.
As a worker, you play an important role in making sure you — and your fellow workers — stay healthy and safe on the job. As a worker, you must: