Bear-safety training to be mandatory for oilsands workers - Action News
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Bear-safety training to be mandatory for oilsands workers

Suncor Energy is ordering all its employees take bear safety training following the death of an employee earlier this year.

Suncor orders training after death of employee Lorna Weafer

Suncor Energy will make bear safety training mandatory for all its workers after the fatal mauling of an employee earlier this year. (CBC)

Suncor Energy is ordering all its employees to takebear-safety training following the death of a worker earlier this year.

"It does save lives,"said Kim Titchener, ofBear Safety and More, the company providing the training. "I'm finding that oilsands workers don't feel very safe at work and would like to have more tools, more training ... to be safer."

Oilsandscompanies are looking to upgradetheir safety standards after Suncor employeeLorna Weaferwas killed in May by a black bear near Suncor's base plant 25 kilometresnorth of Fort McMurray.

Weafer, 36,was coming out of a washroomwhen she was attacked by the bear. Her co-workers failedto scare the animal and didn't have bear spray to deter it.

The type of training willrange from a web-based course for office workers to classroom training for those working in the field, Titchenersaid.

Training will become mandatoryby March31, 2015for all Suncor employees and contractors working in or visiting the Wood Buffalo region.

While other companies are working to develop stronger policies and implement training for their workers,Suncor is the first company operating in the oilsands region to make it mandatory,Titchenersaid.

Her training for workers will include how to avoid encounters;understandingbear behaviour; what to do in anencounter; and how to deploy bear spray, bangers and flare guns.

It will also include ways to deal with other wildlife such as cougars, wolves andcoyotes.