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Firefighter Health Screening and Compensation Review

Full Title:
Firefighters' Health Act [Reinstated]

Summary#

  • This bill tells the Health Minister to create a province-wide health screening plan for firefighters. It focuses on early cancer checks, regular physicals that include mental health, and ongoing lab tests.

  • It covers paid firefighters, paid on-call firefighters, long-serving volunteers, and forest firefighters. The plan must be made public and updated every five years. The government must also review the firefighter disease rules in the Workers Compensation Act and report back.

  • Key points:

    • Who is covered: paid full-time and paid on-call firefighters; volunteer firefighters with 10+ years of service; and forest (wildland) firefighters with 5+ years of service.
    • Deadline: the Health Minister has 12 months after the law takes effect to develop the screening plan.
    • What the plan must include: early cancer screening; regular full physical exams with a mental health check; and regular lab and screening tests.
    • Data collection: the plan must continue collecting health data on firefighters. Details on what data: No publicly available information.
    • Public reporting: the Minister must table (formally present) the plan to the Legislature, and do a review and update every five years.
    • Workers compensation review: within 12 months, the government must review the firefighter disease presumptions and related regulation and table a report with any recommendations. Required topics for recommendations: No publicly available information.
    • The law takes effect on Royal Assent and allows the government to make needed regulations. It does not create new fines or offences.

What it means for you#

  • Firefighters (paid and paid on‑call)

    • A province-wide plan will set out regular cancer screening, full physicals with mental health checks, and lab tests.
    • How often tests happen, where they happen, and who pays will be defined in the plan, not in this bill.
    • Your health data may be collected to track risks and outcomes. What data and how it is protected is not described here.
  • Volunteer firefighters (10+ years of service)

    • You are included in the screening plan once you meet the service threshold.
    • If you have fewer than 10 years, you are not included under this bill’s definition.
  • Forest (wildland) firefighters (5+ years of service)

    • You are included in the screening plan once you meet the 5‑year service mark.
  • Families of firefighters

    • Earlier checks may help find cancer and other issues sooner, which can improve treatment options.
    • The bill does not say whether travel costs or time off for appointments will be covered.
  • Fire departments and local governments

    • Expect to coordinate scheduling, track participation, and support data reporting once the plan is released.
    • Any new duties or costs for departments are not specified in the bill.
  • Health system and clinics

    • More screening appointments and tests for eligible firefighters are likely once the plan starts.
    • Details on capacity, funding, and delivery are not provided in the bill.

Expenses#

No publicly available information.

Proponents' View#

  • Early cancer screening and regular checkups can save lives and catch problems before they get serious.
  • Mental health checks treat psychological injuries with the same priority as physical ones.
  • A single, province-wide plan ensures firefighters get consistent care no matter where they serve.
  • Ongoing data collection will help improve prevention and treatment based on real evidence.
  • Reviewing firefighter disease presumptions under workers compensation keeps the rules current with medical science.
  • Including long‑serving volunteers and wildland firefighters recognizes their risks and provides support.

Opponents' View#

  • The bill does not say who pays for screenings, tests, travel, or time off, which could shift costs to cities, departments, or firefighters.
  • Added screening demand could strain clinics, especially in rural and remote areas.
  • Collecting health data raises privacy and data‑security concerns that the bill does not address.
  • Service‑time thresholds leave out newer volunteers and seasonal workers who may still face risks.
  • The bill creates a plan and a review, but not guaranteed services or timelines for delivery, which could delay real benefits.
  • Some departments already do medicals; a new provincial plan might duplicate existing efforts without clear coordination.