Workers call for heat safety in kitchens

In a bid to protect food workers from rising temperatures, a group rallies for change, focusing on the vulnerabilities experienced during the 2021 heatwave.

Brishti Basu reports for The Tyee.


In short:

  • Food service workers in British Columbia seek legislation for maximum temperature limits in workplaces to combat the dangers of working in excessive heat.
  • Workers Solidarity Network plans a rally to urge for changes that ensure safer working conditions during extreme weather.
  • The call for new standards comes after a report highlighted the adverse effects of the 2021 heat dome on food service employees.

Key quote:

“For food service workers, refusing unsafe work is very complicated for many of them, when their hours and their wages are on the line or they fear broader employer retaliation.”

— Jen Kostuchuk, climate and labour project coordinator at WSN

Why this matters:

For food workers, who often work in kitchens or environments where temperatures can soar due to cooking equipment, these regulations are a lifeline. High temperatures can lead to heat stress, dehydration, and more severe heat-related illnesses such as heat stroke, which not only endanger workers' health but also impair their ability to perform tasks safely and effectively.

LISTEN: El’gin Avila on workers' health and the gig economy.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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