Mining company pauses some operations in northern Manitoba after 7 employees contract COVID-19 - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 10:45 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Manitoba

Mining company pauses some operations in northern Manitoba after 7 employees contract COVID-19

A mining company has suspended operations at its Stall mill after several employees tested positive for COVID-19 and more await lab-confirmed results.

Hudbay Minerals Inc. is also waiting for lab-confirmed results for 'a number of potential additional cases'

Operations at Hudbay's Stall mill in Snow Lake have been suspended because there aren't enough people to run it. But the company plans to get it up and running again some time this week. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

A mining company has suspended operations at a northern Manitoba millafter several employees tested positive for COVID-19 and more await lab-confirmed results.

Seven people working for Hudbay Minerals Inc.,with operations in Snow Lake and Flin Flon, have tested positive for COVID-19 and the company is awaiting lab-confirmed results for "a number of potential additional cases," the company said in a statement to CBC News through a spokesperson.

"While the source of these recent cases in the area remains to be confirmed, it now appears that workplace transmission is likely to have occurred," the statement says.

"Our focus continues to be on the health and safety of our employees, along with their families and the communities in which we operate, and we wish those affected a speedy recovery."

The employees and all known close contacts are self-isolating. Hudbayisproviding access to rapid PCR testing to anyone who works itsSnow Lake facility, the statement says.

Operations at theStall mill in Snow Lake, a town nearly 590 kilometres northwest of Winnipeg, is currently suspended because of there aren't enough people to run it, but Hudbay expects it to start up again some time this week, the statement says.

Meanwhile,Hudbay is co-operating with public health authorities to help with their investigation, the statement says.

The company is also trying to figure out how the illness may have spread throughout the workplace and determine how to prevent further transmission, it adds.

Hudbay's current public health protocols include wearing masks in communal areas and shared vehicles, physical distancing and wearing respirators if a two-metre distance can't be maintained, screening and testing of employees, and asking symptomatic employees to stay home, the statement says.

On-site testing for incoming personnel at the Snow Lake site is also offered. Anyone who does not receive a negative result is sent to isolate and referred to contact public health for further testing, the company says.

With files from Rachel Bergen