• On-Site • Compliance reviews/report in accordance with the Occupational Health and Safety Act and relevant regulations. • Audits • Site inspections RMG Consulting Group Inc. Your #1 choice for Health and Safety in the GTA! Web: www.rmgconsulting.ca | Tel: 905-761-9030 344 Edgeley Blvd., Concord, ON Workplace Safety Training and Consulting • Recommendations • Safety Management • Safety Training/Talks 50 Anniversary th 1-800-265-6348 www.delta-elevator.com sales@delta-elevator.com Products designed and manufactured at our ISO 9001 �erti�ed �it��ener �a�ilit�� 50 Years of Integrity, Service & Quality In-house Manuf In-house Manufacturing acturing Ele Elev va at tor Ins or Inst talla allation tion Main Maint tenance & Ser enance & Service vice Moderniz Moderniza ations tions Design Consult Design Consulta ation tion Cus Cust tom-design om-design ENVIRONMENTAL COMMITTEE certain players are operating with a handicap. “Right now, fill sites that are employing the new BMPs are at a disadvantage, because they’re being forced to reject a greater amount of soil from source sites that aren’t observing the same BMPs,” he expained. DATAMANAGEMENT “I hear a lot of triggers around data, how we’re all going to work together,” noted fellow panelist Ben Morse, head of sales at Tread, which makes GPS tracking technology for construction companies that enables data exchange and capture in real time. Morse stressed that data management will be crucial to operations under the new rules. “We’ve been very focused around subcontractor management. When the new BMPs were deployed, we got a lot of inbound calls from customers asking how they should dealwiththechallengesofmanagingthe data that needs to flow between all these different parties and stakeholders.” Morse believes the new BMPs present an opportunity for the construction industry to improve its own practices. “To manage the chain of custody, you need a seamless stream of data from team to team,” he said. “You also have to manage risk. It presents an opportunity for everyone to work together.” The BMPs have also heightened industry awareness of the need for data to becollectedaheadoftime,saidRodriguez, “so that before the tender is released, before the work is planned, you’re actually assessing the excess soil. Even if the regu- lation goes forward, it’s going to take a number of years to get everybody to under- stand what those minimum requirements are. I think the BMPs are allowing us to start having that conversation.” Other topics touched on at the morning session included the new language embodied in the regula- tion’s generic standards tables and excess soil tables, education around new documentation requirements, the need for pre-emptive soil testing in some cases, and the issue of securing on-site endorsements for the new best practices. “One challenge is getting endorsements from all the players on a construction site – you need the endorsement of every party involved,” Janes said. “That part of it is still a bit of a struggle, given the rigour of the program, so making sure everybody is on side with the new approach is key.” Catherine Wilson, chair of the TCA Environmental Committee, wrapped up the seminar with a call to action, encour- aging attendees to contact their MPPs and the Environment Minister directly to push for action in getting the revised regulation finalized quickly. “It’s a posi- tive thing for the industry, but as long as it’s in limbo it’s costing everyone,” she said. “This government is listening, and they don’t have many ideas yet, so let’s give them this one.” |BD Builders' Digest Quarter 3 2018 | 23