Workers feared for safety at Ontario baby formula plant - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 03:02 AM | Calgary | -1.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Workers feared for safety at Ontario baby formula plant

When the Chinese firm Feihe International invested $332 million to build a milk formula factory in Kingston, Ont., it promised to create hundreds of jobs in Eastern Ontario.Some of the people who took those jobs are now warning the workplace isn't safe and they're afraid someone could get killed.

Government-backed Canada Royal Milk facility built in Kingston with $332M foreign investment from China's Feihe

Five current or former employees of Canada Royal Milk in Kingston, Ont., have shared their experiences with CBC News. Their identities are being protected because they fear reprisals in the community for speaking out. (Marc Robichaud/CBC)

When a Chinese dairy processor invested $332 million to build a baby formula plant in Kingston, Ont., it promised to create hundreds of jobs in Eastern Ontario.

Now, some of the people who took those jobs at Feihe International's Canadian subsidiary are warning theworkplace isn't safe and they're afraid someone is going to get killed.

"They didn't care about you. They didn't care about your family," one worker said. "We were told constantly, 'This is the way they do things in China.'

"So I kept asking them, 'Why did you build a factory in Canada, then?'"

"People would ask me where I work and I'd say [Canada Royal Milk], and they're like, 'Oh, we've heard of that place, we've heard the horror stories,'" another worker said. "And I just shake my head They're true."

These two are among five current or former employees who have shared their experiences with CBC News. CBC has agreed to protect their identities because they fear reprisals for speaking out.

Records obtained under Ontario's freedom of information law document a range of workplace concerns linked totheKingstonplant that have beenraised with municipal and provincial officials over the last two years including explosion and electrocution risks, unsafe storage of chemicals and air quality concerns.

Ontario workplace safety statistics also point to a high rate of injuries at theplant.

When its investment was announced in 2016, Feihe Internationalsaid it planned to use Canadian cow and goat milk to manufacture tens of thousands of tonnes of powdered productsannually, with about 85 per cent of itearmarked for exportto China.

The general manager of the Kingston plant andother senior executiveswere brought over from the Chinese parent company. Othermembers of the management team were hired in Canada. The plant's workforce is diverse.

Governments supported new plant

The Canadian facility, incorporated in Canada under the name Canada Royal Milk, was built with the largest foreign investment Ontario's agri-food sector had ever seen.

All three levels of government put taxpayer resources behind the project, arguing it would stimulate Eastern Ontario's economy.

We had no confidence at all in the machinery ...- Canada Royal Milk employee

To date, the government of Ontario has provided $13.8 million to Canada Royal Milk through its jobs and prosperity fund for the food and beverage sector, with the balance of its $24 million investmentexpected to be paid between now and 2024.

But Danie Cousineau, the corporate secretary and manager of the Canadian Dairy Commission, refused to disclose how much federal funding was approved for Canada Royal Milk under its matching investment fund arguingthat such third-party information issubject to Access to Information Act rules.

The city of Kingston transferred 16 hectares of industrial landto the company to build the plant.

The Canada Royal Milk facility in Kingston, Ont., was built with a $332-million investment from its parent company, China Feihe International. (Marc Robichaud/CBC)

Workers told CBC News thatthey were enthusiastic about the project at first. One spoke offeeling "set for life." Although the pay wasn't high, workers thought that would change once operations became profitable.

But as production ramped up, the plant struggled with equipment malfunctions and organizational confusion.

One workersaid it was "total chaos, sometimes."

"We had no confidence at all in the machinery," hesaid.

WATCH / Current and former employees speak about experiences workingat Canada Royal Milk:

Employees say Ontario baby formula plant is unsafe

4 years ago
Duration 5:17
Current and former employees of the Canada Royal Milk baby formula production plant in Ontario, which was much-touted by all levels of government when it arrived, say the workplace isn't safe and they're worried someone could die.

When, for example,Ontario regulations required workersto follow a certain process for milk pasteurizationand something went wrong,he said,workers were toldby supervisors to simply skip that process.

Earlier this month, a dumping incident at the plant's wastewater treatment facility smelled so foul it alarmed local residents.

Injuries above average

The issues went beyond equipment malfunctions and wasted milk. People got hurt.

The most recent data available from Ontario's Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) are for 2019, the plant's first year of operations. In those early months, Canada Royal Milk employeesmissedwork due toinjuries or illnesses at a rate four times higher than ratesrecorded byemployees at other Ontario food manufacturers with similar workplaces.

The company reported five injuries in 2019 thatrequiredtreatmentbeyond standard first aid, thatcaused anemployeeto miss work or that caused modifications to an employee's workplaceresponsibilities. The publicly available reporting shows injury claims at the Kingston plant included chemical burns,exposure to caustic, noxious or allergenic materials andat least one facial injury.

Late in 2020, Canada Royal Milk joined a WSIB program designed to help employers improve their workplace health and safety.

This Canada Royal Milk photo, obtained by CBC News, is part of the company's evidence before the Ontario Labour Relations Board. It shows the part of the plant where milk trucks are unloaded. (Canada Royal Milk/Ontario Labour Relations Board submission)

One worker spoke of how employees worked at high elevations within the plantwithout training or safety harnesses, sometimes whilecarrying heavy equipment.A fallfrom thecurved and sometimesslippery roof of amilk truck during a winter delivery, for example, could mean a12-foot drop onto concrete, he said.

WATCH / Workers discussion conditions at Canada Royal Milk plant:

Working for Canada Royal Milk

4 years ago
Duration 1:41
Five current or former employees of Canada Royal Milk in Kingston, Ont. have shared their experiences with CBC News. Their identities are being protected because they fear reprisals in the community for speaking out. This man describes his experience with Canada Royal Milk.

"Nobody questioned it, right? Even I didn't question it at first."

Theworker said he was not confidentthat workplace incidents were being tracked and reported properly. When a workplace incident happened, he said, staffwere told to generate only handwritten reports for the human resources department.

"It was just getting tossed out or getting forgotten about or sitting in a pile on the desk somewhere," he said. "So people stopped reporting it, basically."

Reports of unlicensed electrical work

As construction on the plant was wrapping upin January2020, a complaint was filed with the Ontario Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development's occupational health and safety office alleging unqualified millwrights replaceda heater on a 460-volt live wire without protective equipment.

"They could have killed themselves quite easily," one worker said. "There [were] lots of instances, mostly with the [foreign] Chinese contractors, working on 600 volts live every day, all day.

"It's a federally mandated rule. You are not allowed to work live.It takes less than an amp to stop your heart."

The worker said hetriedto warn contractors brought in from China that they were putting theirsafetyat risk, but struggled to get the message across becausethey didn't understand English.The plant's safety manager, he said,rarely left his office.

The worker saidthatdried milk powder dust which iscombustible was commonly found floatingin the air inparts of the plant; he feared it could ignite with a spark or stray arc from faulty electrical work.

The worker also said some electrical panels weren't sufficiently rated for use around equipment that is hosed down for cleaning.

Employees also reportedfire exits being locked or secured with an electronic key pass system, which could make it hard to get out quickly in an emergency.

Explosion fears

Employees said they're particularly worried about the plant's cyclone-style milk dryers;one compared the machinesto a "four-storey pressure cooker." The dryersspinmilkwith gusts of hot air in their massive steel cylinders until it turns to powder.

Last August, a call was placed to the Ontario labour ministry. A record obtained by CBC News says the caller, name "unknown," warned that "the milk dryer is going to explode."

The caller said that,earlier in the summer, the fire suppression system for thedryers failed, leaving 15 centimetres of water all over the floor but the company continued to operate its dryers without its safety system. The caller said one became clogged with burntmilk productbut did not shut down, and afire subsequentlybroke out inside the pressurized dryer.

The caller said that when the provincial inspector came, management chose the individuals who spoke to the government representative. The caller was convinced those chosen to speak were "lying" in order to cover things up.

The labour ministryinspector's report shows the incident was reviewed with company representativesbut no orders were required.

"Workers are reminded that the employer need not always agree with their suggestions but that they should always consider them," the case report concluded. It also said the caller should have left a number for the inspector, as "sometimes this results in no visit required or the worker having more information to go back to the employer with."

The labour ministry they're useless in every sense of the word.- Canada Royal Milk employee

According to the inspector's report, Canada Royal Milk told the labour ministry "the fire department had been in to approve the installation of the fire systems in the workplace."

When CBC News tried to confirm this with Kingston's fire department, it was told fire prevention officials were not required to approve the separate fire suppression system for the plant's dryers because this additional system was "voluntary," in addition to its explosion vents.

Kingston fire inspector Richard Vaskoalsosaid that, apart fromtwo false alarms during the plant's construction phase,there have been no fire code inspections at the plant.

In an email obtained by CBC News, William Sands, a captain with Kingston Fire & Rescue, described how his crew responded to an alarm at the plant a year agobut found itself unable to properly investigate.

"The [plant] workers reset the alarm prior to [fire department] arrival. They have been told before not to do this," Sands wrote.

"Next time they do this, am I expected to march my crew through one of the biggest industrial facilities in Kingston to make sure everything is OK? I hope not, because it's not going to happen."

An employee familiar with the dryer's alarm system told CBC News he believes it's not up to industry standards such asthe National Fire Protection Association requirement that alarm circuits be supervisedso that,if someone tampers with them, the fire department is alerted.

The worker said he's "zero per cent" comfortable that it's safe to operate the dryer.

Air quality concerns

Several employees told CBC News that on one occasion, when the dryer became seriously clogged, outside workers were sent deep into the confined space after regular business hours to chisel out the burnt milk without proper equipment.

Provincial inspection reports show an anonymous complaint was filed about this incidentin early August. After talking to the company, the inspector's report said it was unknown whether the dryer met the definition of a confined space where oxygen levels could be depleted. The inspectorrequested more information.

He also reportednoticinga small pipe sticking out of the floor on that visit and issued an order about the tripping hazard.

Last June, an anonymous caller contacted the provincial labourministry to report that Canada Royal Milk was turning off its ventilation system to save money, resulting in very hot and humid conditions and a lack of fresh air on the production floor. In this instance, the inspector wrote his report without checking anything in person the record indicates "phone and electronic contact only."

It was at least the second time air quality had been raised with the ministry. A labour ministry report last spring noted the"high level of particulate matter in the air" in the ingredients room, and the need for workersto wear respirators. That too was investigated with "phone contact only."

Employees said they struggled to get the respirators the ministry agreed they needed. The files obtained byCBCNewsinclude handwritten notes from an inspector in late March that show the ministry was aware of an "employee with pneumonia."

Some employees told CBC News they constantly worked with powdered substances and milk dust was everywhere, but they weren't always provided with adequate respirators. (Canada Royal Milk/Ontario Labour Relations Board submission)

"The labour ministry they're useless in every sense of the word," one employee said.

"You see them come, you see them talk to the management and then everything calms down for a week or so, maybe longer. And then it happens again," another worker said. "What the hell, man? Like, didn't you just get talked to?"

CBC News asked theOntario Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development a series of questions abouthow inspectors handle anonymous tips,its policy on when site visits are required andwhether the pandemic affected inspections over the past year.

In a statement, ministry spokesperson Kalem McSween said inspectors conduct in-person investigations "whenever it is necessary to do so." The law requires employers to allow inspectors access to any areas the inspector deems necessary, he said.

"Where anonymity has been requested and where reprisal against the complainant is a concern, the inspector will investigate the nature of the complaint and address any hazards/contraventions that come to the inspector's attention," he said.

Health and safetycompany's'top priority'

Employees also allege chemicals were not used and stored safely at the Kingston plant.

Pickling paste a potentially harmful acid product used for cleaning stainless steel welds was sitting around unlabelled in water bottles, workers told CBC News. Workers recall two people being taken to the hospital after coming into contact with the acid without adequate protection.

Concerns raised with the labour ministry in April cited a lack of"SDS [safety data sheet] information" for chemicals around the plant. After an inspectionconducted over the phone, a provincial governmentinspector reported the SDS information was available in nine locations around the plant.

Here I am with an employer that doesn't seem to give a damn about my health and safety so what am I left to do?- Canada Royal Milk employee

CBC has obtained photos and videos of a chemical storage area in a corridor that employees were told was illegal because it lacked things like a proper drain, ventilation and a fire suppression system.

When the company was notified an inspector was coming, employees said, thechemicals were moved from that storage areato avoid detection.

Records obtained from the fire department show that a caller who would not identify himself phoned the City of Kingstonin late June to report "bulk chemical storage." The handwritten notes say the caller described the precise location in the building, listing off what was stored there andthe types of containers used.

It's notclear what happened after this call. Subsequent fire inspector notes mention "no chemicals" and an emptied room, but the context is unclear because sections of the documents are blacked-out.

A Canada Royal Milk employee shared this photo of what workers believe is an illegal chemical storage area. (Name withheld)

Canada Royal Milk declined an interview request from CBC News. In a statement, the companysaid that its operations had been "delayed and impacted by the global pandemic, but the health and safety of our employees continues to be our top priority."

"In every aspect of our business, whenever concerns are raised, we readily cooperate with the appropriate authorities and regulatory bodies to ensure that they are investigated in a transparent manner, addressed and resolved," the statementcontinued.

"As a very proud local employer and member of the Kingston community, we have worked closely with the Ontario Ministry of Labour to ensure our facilities, training and equipment are up to their standards and continue to make additional improvements, following our own best practices, and based on employee feedback."

Worker felt 'helpless'

Workers who knew something was unsafe because of their experiences on other job sites in Canada said they struggled to communicate those risks toother employees who had limited or no English skills.

"There was only one translator, and he was always up in the office," one said.

Another worker said that many of the plant's recent hires have been young and "right out of college," with "no concept" of what's legal because they've never worked in Canada before.

Despite the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, some former plant workers have now found other jobs. They said they're speaking out in support of their former colleagues and others who may work there in the future.

One said workers are depressed because they don't know what else to do. Some are stressed to the point of taking anxiety medication.

"It was not a healthy environment for anybody, whatsoever," a worker told CBC News. "But around this area, there's not a lot of work and a lot of them got families and a lot of them got kids."

"It made me feel very helpless," another said. "Here I am with an employer that doesn't seem to give a damn about my health and safety so what am I left to do?

"For the sake of a paycheque and not telling my youngest kid his brand new bedroom is in the woods, I keep going."

With files from Kristen Everson