Migrant Workers Demand Accountability
Action outside WSIB, March 21, 2023
On March 21, the organization Injured Workers Action for Justice and
Justice for Migrant Workers held an action in defence of the
right of migrant workers to receive compensation for workplace injuries
and diseases from Ontario's Workplace Safety and Insurance Board
(WSIB). The WSIB is notorious for denying compensation and treatment to
injured workers and favouring the interests of employers, and migrant
workers in particular face additional discrimination.
At the action held on the occasion of the International Day
for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, 21 migrant injured
workers told stories which show how the WSIB process is racist
and worsens the physical, mental and emotional state of workers
who have suffered a workplace injury. Last year these same
workers wrote an open letter to demand change to Ontario's
discriminatory workers' compensation system and the systemic
racism they face at the WSIB. Since that letter there has been zero
change and zero accountability from
the WSIB. This year workers called in to the WSIB because many
migrant injured workers are no longer here in Canada. Following
a workplace injury, many migrant injured workers are repatriated
and forced to recover from their injuries back in their home
country. Canada's racist immigration laws and the WSIB's
discriminatory practices make injured workers feel powerless by
isolating them and breaking up injured worker communities.
Injured workers' support and solidarity knows no borders, the
organization points out. Workers understand this and instead are
building power through transnational solidarity and actions.
On the call to the WSIB president, workers raised two main issues: their horrific experiences of improper health care support and the racist reality of the practice of "deeming" workers. Posted below is an extract from the leaflet issued on that occasion.
The WSIB Must Provide Real Health Care for Injured Workers
Because of exploitation and unsafe labour practices, migrant workers are at heightened risk of becoming injured on the job.
Once injured, many injured workers, and especially migrant injured workers, face difficulties with improper health care support as they recover from their workplace injury. The WSIB does not provide proper funding of medical treatments and medications that are necessary for workers to recover properly. The WSIB also does not listen to the recommendations that health care providers provide to injured workers. Instead, they often override a worker's doctor's recommendation with their own doctor's opinion. This opinion does not benefit the worker because the WSIB's doctors have not established a strong clinical relationship with the worker. In fact, the WSIB doctors' opinions are often given without them even meeting the injured worker.
For migrant injured workers, many of whom are racialized, these issues are magnified. Following injury, migrant workers are often forced back to their home country by their employer. The WSIB does not provide them with supports that would allow them to stay in Canada to receive proper health care. Instead migrant injured workers are forced to find treatment on their own in their home country. Often these countries do not have accessible health care for workers to help them recover from the complex injuries they suffered working here in Canada.
The reality is that once a migrant worker is injured, Canada and the WSIB often force them deeper into poverty and downloads all health care and worker compensation onto the backs of people in the Global South.
The WSIB Must Abolish the Shameful and Racist Practice of
"Deeming"
The practice of deeming allows the WSIB to cut injured workers' benefits by pretending (or "deeming") that they are working and making money in a suitable job in Ontario. This practice of cutting benefits using fake wages by the WSIB makes injured workers feel disposable and drives many injured workers into poverty. This unfair and make-believe practice is even worse for migrant workers. For migrant injured workers these Ontario jobs are not actually available to them because they have been repatriated and forced back home.
This article was published in
Volume 53 Number 5 - May 2023
Article Link:
https://cpcml.ca/Tmlm2023/Articles/M5300512.HTM
Website: www.cpcml.ca Email: editor@cpcml.ca