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WorkSafeBC Preliminary 2015 Base Premium Rates Injury Statistics and Trends. Accommodation, Ski Hills, Food & Beverage, Golf Courses, Casinos and Outdoor Sport Tour go2 Health & Safety Summit. August 21, 2014. Topics. WorkSafeBC’s mandate Overview of the preliminary 2015 rates - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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WorkSafeBC
Preliminary 2015 Base Premium RatesInjury Statistics and Trends
Accommodation, Ski Hills, Food & Beverage, Golf Courses, Casinos and Outdoor Sport Tour
go2 Health & Safety Summit
August 21, 2014
• WorkSafeBC’s mandate• Overview of the preliminary 2015 rates
• Industry Accident & Injury Stats and Trends
• Resources
• Questions
Topics
To work with workers and employers as follows:
• To promote the prevention of workplace injury, illness, and
disease
• To rehabilitate those who are injured, and assist with timely
return to work
• To provide fair compensation to replace lost wages for injured
workers during their recovery
• To ensure sound financial management for a viable workers’
compensation system
WorkSafeBC’s Mandate
The average base premium rate is projected to remain unchanged at $1.70 per $100 of employers’ assessable payroll.
Increase in claims costs, Long Term Disability awards, and Health Care costs
• Excess investment returns
• $117 million withdrawal from the Capital Adequacy Reserve, and the capping of rate increases for industries at 20 percent have kept the average rate from increasing next year
• 44 percent of employers will experience a base rate increase
• 54 percent of employers will experience a base rate decrease
• 2 percent of employers will have their base rate remain unchanged
Overview of 2015 Rates
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
2009 - 2013 Profile
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
J UNE 30, 2014
CU 761056 (Short Term Overnight Accommodation) plus761004, 761008, 761017, 761024, 761026, 761037, and 761055
6
2015 Rates Overnight Accommodation
Key Findings
7Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
In 2013, there were 1,902 employers in this industry, a 4% decrease over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the selected CUs remains lower than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks increased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is lower than all BC (2013: 50% for Overnight and Short-term Accommodation vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the
selected CUs is similar to all-BC.
Light duty cleaners, food and beverage servers contribute the most claims in the selected CUs.
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in the selected CUs decreased by 1% to 295 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 114 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there were 6 work-related deaths.
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 1,902 employers in this industry, a 4% decrease over the past four years.
8Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 809 $7,210,365 39,974 1.7 N/A 46,319 54 69 0
2010 871 $7,409,766 44,679 1.9 N/A 46,381 64 92 1
2011 911 $9,646,074 49,867 1.9 54% 46,403 66 102 4
2012 866 $12,578,571 44,759 1.8 46% 45,296 69 75 1
2013 832 $10,316,687 42,966 1.8 50% 44,384 62 71 0
Total 4,289 $47,161,463 222,245 1.8 (Avg) 50% (Avg) 45,757 (Avg) 63 (Avg) 409 6
2009 to 2013 % Change
3% 43% 7% 6% N/A -4% 15% 3% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the selected CUs remains lower than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
1.7
1.9 1.91.8
1.8
2.32.3
2.3 2.3 2.3
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
ymen
t
Injury Rate - Overnight and Short-term Accommodation Injury Rate - All BC
9Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Claims and Employment Trends
785
861
884
833
799
46,319
46,381
46,403
45,296
44,384
43,000
43,500
44,000
44,500
45,000
45,500
46,000
46,500
47,000
720
740
760
780
800
820
840
860
880
900
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a slight decrease in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims decreased by 4%. This has resulted in a slight decrease in the Injury Rate for the selected CUs in 2013.
10Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has increased by 0.6% in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the selected CUs is similar to all-BC.
54
6466
69
62
5559 60 60
58
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation All BC
11Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Return to Work (RTW)
12Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
54%46% 50%54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks increased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is lower than all BC (2013: 50% for Overnight and Short-term Accommodation vs. 52% for all BC).
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Light duty cleaners 2,145 50%
Food and beverage servers 272 6%
Cooks 246 6%
Janitors, caretakers and building superintendents 231 5%
Other trades helpers and labourers 155 4%
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations 137 3%
Dry cleaning, laundry and related occupations 121 3%
Hotel front desk clerks 103 2%
Outdoor sport and recreational guides 92 2%
Support occupations in accommodation, travel and facilities set-up services 90 2%
Other 697 16%
Grand Total 4,289 100%
Light duty cleaners, food and beverage servers contribute the most claims in the selected CUs.
13Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 2 0% 0 0% 2 0%
15 - 24 188 4% 352 8% 540 13%
25 - 34 361 8% 459 11% 820 19%
35 - 44 298 7% 602 14% 900 21%
45 - 54 394 9% 830 19% 1,224 29%
55 - 64 241 6% 482 11% 723 17%
65 and Over 36 1% 43 1% 79 2%
Total 1,520 35% 2,768 65% 4,288 100%
Male Female Total
*There is one claim where the age and gender is uncoded.
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
14Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 13%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 - 64) represent 46% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The majority of these claims were made by females.
Accident and Injury Type
Overexertion 33% Overexertion 29% Overexertion 33%Fall on Same Level 17% Fall on Same Level 19% Fall on Same Level 22%Struck By 12% Fall from Elevation 18% Fall from Elevation 12%Other Bodily Motion 10% Other Bodily Motion 7% Other Bodily Motion 9%Fall from Elevation 8% Struck By 7% Struck By 6%Other 19% Other 21% Other 17%
Other Strains 36% Other Strains 35% Other Strains 41%Back Strain 25% Back Strain 20% Back Strain 21%Contusion 11% Fractures 17% Fractures 14%Laceration 8% Tendinitis, Tenosynovitis 5% Contusion 5%Fractures 6% Concussion 4% Tendinitis, Tenosynovitis 5%Other 14% Other 20% Other 14%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Overexertion contributes the most to claims, costs, and days lost in the selected CUs. The most common injury type is Other Strains, which also contributes the most claim costs and days lost.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.15
Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors
Working Surfaces, 889,
21%
Bodily Motion, 593, 14%
Furniture, f ixtures, 580,
13%Boxes, Containers, 517,
12%
Buildings & Structures, 350,
8%
Other, 1,360, 32%
Source of Injury
Back, 1,093, 26%
Wrist, Fingers & Hand, 783, 18%
Ankle, Toe & Feet, 385, 9%
Shoulders, 381, 9%
Knee, 309, 7%
Other, 1,338, 31%
Body Part Injured
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
16Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the selected CUs combined for 409 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 10% of the claims in the selected CUs and account for 30% of the claims cost paid to date.
Fall on Same Level 31% Fractures 47%
Fall from Elevation 21% Contusion 12%
Struck By 15% Laceration 12%
Struck Against 9% Concussion 7%
Overexertion 7% Back Strain 7%
Other 17% Other 15%
Accident Type Injury Type
The serious injury claims in these CUs are more likely to involve: fall on same level, fall from elevation, fractures.
17Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Serious Injury Claim Examples
18Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Fall on Same Level Cost Days
45,405
$ 120,486
160,164$ 209
pulling full laundry cart onto elevator & wheels of cart were not in good condition & due to weight in cart, it fell over & wkr fell with the cart.
387
Fall from Elevation Cost Days
$
Walking down the stairwell tripped and fell backwards. 16,000$ 110
bringing luggage from one room to another - carrying luggage down the stairs, wkr fell backwards and slid down 2-3 steps.
finished cleaning bathroom and slipped on wet floor and fell to floor
833
Work-Related Deaths
19Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Year CU Code Occupation Description
2010 761055 Light duty cleanersFATAL - OXYCODONE OVERDOSE - CLAIM ORIGINALLY ACCEPTED FOR A DISC INJURY FROM GRABBING A SLIPPING BAG OF HEAVY LAUNDRY
2011 761008 Chain saw and skidder operatorsFATAL - PULMONARY EMBOLUS DUE TO DVT DUE TO A TIBIAL FRACTURE WITH PARAPLEGIA SUSTAINED INITIALLY WHEN STRUCK BY FALLING TREE, SPINAL CORD INJURY RECEIVED
2011 761008 Outdoor sport and recreational guidesFATAL - 19' COMMERCIAL SPORT FISHING VESSEL WITH ONE GUIDE AND 3 GUESTS FAILED TO RETURN TO FISHING LODGE. VESSEL NOT FOUND
2011 761017 Administrative officersFELL DOWN STAIRS HITTING HEAD ON CEMENT LANDING - PASSED AWAY IN HOSPITAL
2011 761017 Other trades helpers and labourersFATAL - WORKING ON HYDRAULIC-LIFTED ROW OF SEATS, BRAKE GAVE WAY, SEATS FELL ON NECK & BACK OF HEAD. WKR FELL 9.5' THROUGH OPENING HITTING HEAD ON FLOOR
2012 761017Janitors, caretakers and building superintendents
FATAL - FELL APPROX 20 FT FROM A LADDER WHILE CHECKING A SMOKE ALARM ON VAULTED CEILING
Prevention Activity
297
336361
326
277
121111
151
12096 94
28
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
Compared to 2012, the number of Inspection Reports issued in the selected CUs decreased by 15% to 277 documents in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 121 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
20Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Prevention Orders
379414
473
299 295
114
481
584642
536
429
138
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in the selected CUs decreased by 1% to 295 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 114 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
21Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Penalties & Warning Letters
3
4
6 6
3
1
2
1
3
2
3
2
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Warning Letters Sent Penalties Imposed
Between 2009 and 2014YTD, 23 warning letters were sent and 13 administrative penalties were imposed.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
22Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Overnight and Short-term Accommodation
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
2009 - 2013 Profile
Classification Unit # 761035
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment
J UNE 30, 2014
24
Base Rates
Key Findings
25Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
In 2013, there were 8,048 employers in this industry, a 5% increase over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU remains lower than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks decreased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 67% for Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU is significantly lower than all BC.
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations, cooks contribute the most claims in the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU.
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment decreased by 2% to 465 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 200 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there were 5 work-related deaths.
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 8,048 employers in this industry, a 5% increase over the past four years.
26Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 2,246 $9,602,969 72,486 1.7 N/A 133,566 34 200 0
2010 2,212 $11,472,635 70,777 1.6 N/A 134,343 37 199 2
2011 2,311 $12,507,459 70,853 1.7 68% 132,417 38 198 0
2012 2,441 $14,559,050 68,596 1.8 68% 136,273 36 220 2
2013 2,247 $14,625,355 70,776 1.6 67% 138,583 37 203 0
Total 11,457 $62,767,468 353,488 1.7 (Avg) 68% (Avg) 135,036 (Avg) 37 (Avg) 1,020 4
2009 to 2013 % Change
0% 52% -2% -5% N/A 4% 9% 2% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU remains lower than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
1.71.6
1.7 1.81.6
2.32.3
2.3 2.3 2.3
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
ymen
t
Injury Rate - Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment Injury Rate - All BC
27Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Claims and Employment Trends
2,237
2,119
2,249
2,398
2,211
133,566
134,343
132,417
136,273
138,583
129,000
130,000
131,000
132,000
133,000
134,000
135,000
136,000
137,000
138,000
139,000
140,000
1,950
2,000
2,050
2,100
2,150
2,200
2,250
2,300
2,350
2,400
2,450
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
28Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has increased by 4.1% in 2013.
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a slight increase in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims decreased by 8%. This has resulted in a decrease in the Injury Rate for the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU is significantly lower than all BC.
3437
38 3637
55
59 60 6058
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment All BC
29Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Return to Work (RTW)
30Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
68% 68% 67%
54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks decreased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 67% for Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment vs. 52% for all BC).
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations, cooks contribute the most claims in the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU.
31Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations 3,815 33%
Cooks 3,566 31%
Food and beverage servers 1,286 11%
Restaurant and food service managers 603 5%
Chefs 429 4%
Food service supervisors 276 2%
Cashiers 275 2%
Bakers 223 2%
Bartenders 217 2%
Maitres d'hotel and hosts/hostesses 136 1%
Other 631 6%
Grand Total 11,457 100%
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 11 0% 17 0% 28 0%
15 - 24 1,961 17% 2,079 18% 4,040 35%
25 - 34 1,185 10% 1,357 12% 2,542 22%
35 - 44 685 6% 1,160 10% 1,845 16%
45 - 54 547 5% 1,359 12% 1,906 17%
55 - 64 300 3% 689 6% 989 9%
65 and Over 53 0% 50 0% 103 1%
Total 4,742 41% 6,711 59% 11,453 100%
Male Female Total
* There are 4 claims where the age and gender were uncoded.
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
32Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 35%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 - 64) represent 26% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The majority of these claims were made by females.
Accident and Injury Type
Struck By 25% Fall on Same Level 29% Fall on Same Level 30%Fall on Same Level 18% Overexertion 20% Overexertion 23%Overexertion 17% Struck By 12% Struck By 13%Exposure to Heat, Cold 14% Fall from Elevation 7% Other Bodily Motion 7%Struck Against 11% Other Bodily Motion 6% Struck Against 6%Other 15% Other 25% Other 21%
Laceration 26% Other Strains 32% Other Strains 33%Other Strains 22% Fractures 14% Back Strain 16%Heat Burns 14% Back Strain 14% Fractures 13%Back Strain 14% Laceration 10% Laceration 10%Contusion 10% Heat Burns 6% Contusion 6%Other 13% Other 23% Other 21%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Struck By contributes the most claims, while Fall on Same Level contributes the most to claim costs in the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU. The most common injury type is Laceration, while Other Strains contributes the most claim costs.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.33
Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors
Boxes, Containers, 2,187, 19%
Working Surfaces, 2,088,
18%
Hand Tools, 1,748, 15%
Animal Products, Food Products, 991,
9%
Bodily Motion, 843, 7%
Other, 3,600, 32%
Source of Injury
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
34Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Wrist, Fingers & Hand, 4,541,
39%
Back, 1,719, 15%
Other Upper Extremity, 782,
7%
Ankle, Toe & Feet, 780, 7%
Shoulders, 536, 5%
Other, 3,099, 27%
Body Part Injured
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU combined for 1,020 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 9% of the claims in the Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment CU and account for 39% of the claims cost paid to date.
Struck By 30% Fractures 32%
Fall on Same Level 29% Laceration 31%
Struck Against 14% Contusion 9%
Fall from Elevation 6% Concussion 6%
Exposure to Heat, Cold 5% Heat Burns 5%
Other 15% Other 17%
Accident Type Injury Type
The serious injury claims in this CU are more likely to involve: fall on same level, fractures.
35Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Serious Injury Claim Examples
36Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Fall on Same Level Cost Days
Worker slipped on some water on the floor and fell. 40,000$ 170
Walked thru swinging door in back room, took 2 steps , slipped & fell on wet floor. 22,000$ 110
Struck By Cost Days
$
Worker was moving a cart of dishes into elevator, as the cart went over the gap between the floor & elevator, a plate fell off cart hitting worker on finger.
28,000$ 170
cutting calamari when knife slipped and punctured left hand 227,361
307
Work-Related Deaths
Year Occupation Description
2010 Restaurant and food service managersFATAL - FELL OFF TAILGATE OF PICK UP TRUCK AND HEAVY BARREL OF DIESEL LANDED ON TOP OF WORKER
2010 CooksFATAL - DROWNED AT A LEADERS DAY OUT EVENT WHEN WKR DOVE OFF OF BOAT TO RETREIVE A PAIR OF SUNGLASSES
2012 Restaurant and food service managers FATAL SHOOTING2012 Food and beverage servers FATAL GUNSHOT WOUND2014 Chefs FATAL MESOTHELIOMA
37Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Prevention Activity
422380 376
399437
217
113 119 11584 98
77
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
500
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
Compared to 2012, the number of Inspection Reports issued in Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment increased by 10% to 437 documents in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 217 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
38Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Prevention Orders
518451
360
475 465
200
593641
532 550
717
233
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment decreased by 2% to 465 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 200 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
39Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Penalties & Warning Letters
3
5
4
5
4
1
0 0
1 1 1 1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Warning Letters Sent Penalties Imposed
Between 2009 and 2014YTD, 22 warning letters were sent and four administrative penalties were imposed.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
40Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Restaurant or Other Dining Establishment - CU # 761035
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
2009 - 2013 Profile
Classification Unit # 761034
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge
J UNE 30, 2014
42
Base Rates
Key Findings
43Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
In 2013, there were 767 employers in this industry, a 6% decrease over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU remains lower than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks decreased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 63% for Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU is significantly lower than all BC.
Cooks, food and beverage servers contribute the most claims in the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU.
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge increased by 5% to 91 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 19 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there were no work-related deaths.
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 767 employers in this industry, a 6% decrease over the past four years.
44Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 217 $1,671,046 7,385 1.4 N/A 14,646 36 27 0
2010 168 $1,128,142 5,729 1.2 N/A 14,032 42 17 0
2011 234 $1,874,468 9,100 1.7 61% 13,051 51 43 0
2012 183 $2,031,535 7,519 1.3 64% 13,021 36 24 0
2013 190 $2,147,899 6,614 1.5 63% 12,868 42 33 0
Total 992 $8,853,090 36,347 1.4 (Avg) 63% (Avg) 13,524 (Avg) 41 (Avg) 144 0
2009 to 2013 % Change
-12% 29% -10% 12% N/A -12% 17% 22% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU remains lower than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
1.41.2
1.7
1.3
1.5
2.32.3
2.3 2.3 2.3
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
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t
Injury Rate - Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge Injury Rate - All BC
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Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Claims and Employment Trends
201
168
219
171
197
14,646
14,032
13,051 13,02112,868
11,500
12,000
12,500
13,000
13,500
14,000
14,500
15,000
0
50
100
150
200
250
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a slight decrease in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims increased by 15%. This has resulted in an increase in the Injury Rate for the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU in 2013.
46Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has increased by 1.7% in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU is significantly lower than all BC.
36
42
51
3642
55
59 60 6058
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge All BC
47Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Return to Work (RTW)
48Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
61% 64% 63%54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks decreased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 63% for Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge vs. 52% for all BC).
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Cooks 386 39%
Food and beverage servers 125 13%
Bartenders 114 11%
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations 93 9%
Security guards and related security service occupations 58 6%
Restaurant and food service managers 53 5%
Retail salespersons 39 4%
Chefs 28 3%
Other service support occupations, n.e.c. 16 2%
Janitors, caretakers and building superintendents 15 2%
Other 65 7%
Grand Total 992 100%
Cooks, food and beverage servers contribute the most claims in the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU.
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Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 2 0% 0 0% 2 0%
15 - 24 181 18% 137 14% 318 32%
25 - 34 173 17% 133 13% 306 31%
35 - 44 73 7% 98 10% 171 17%
45 - 54 47 5% 74 7% 121 12%
55 - 64 22 2% 38 4% 60 6%
65 and Over 10 1% 4 0% 14 1%
Total 508 51% 484 49% 992 100%
Male Female Total
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
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Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 32%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 – 64)represent 18% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The slight majority of these claims were made by males.
Accident and Injury Type
Struck By 25% Acts of Violence, Force 33% Overexertion 27%Overexertion 17% Overexertion 17% Fall on Same Level 20%Fall on Same Level 14% Struck By 11% Acts of Violence, Force 18%Acts of Violence, Force 11% Fall on Same Level 11% Struck By 12%Exposure to Heat, Cold 10% Fall from Elevation 8% Other Bodily Motion 6%Other 24% Other 20% Other 17%
Laceration 27% Other Strains 24% Other Strains 30%Other Strains 21% Fractures 20% Fractures 19%Back Strain 14% Concussion 14% Back Strain 11%Heat Burns 10% Back Strain 8% Laceration 10%Fractures 8% Laceration 7% Concussion 7%Other 20% Other 28% Other 23%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Struck By contributes the most claims, while Acts of Violence, Force contributes the most to claim costs in the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU. The most common injury type is Laceration, while Other Strains contributes the most claim costs.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.51
Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors
Boxes, Containers, 194,
20%
Working Surfaces, 163,
16%
Hand Tools, 160, 16%
People, 92, 9%
Bodily Motion, 78, 8%
Other, 305, 31%
Source of Injury
Wrist, Fingers & Hand, 370, 37%
Back, 144, 15%Ankle, Toe & Feet, 90, 9%
Shoulders, 58, 6%
Other Upper Extremity, 53,
5%
Other, 277, 28%
Body Part Injured
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
52Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU combined for 144 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 15% of the claims in the Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge CU and account for 53% of the claims cost paid to date.
Struck By 25% Fractures 40%
Acts of Violence, Force 24% Laceration 31%
Fall on Same Level 19% Concussion 6%
Struck Against 11% Dislocation 4%
Fall from Elevation 8% Other Injuries 3%
Other 13% Other 15%
Accident Type Injury Type
The serious injury claims in this CU are more likely to involve: acts of violence, force, fractures.
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Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Serious Injury Claim Examples
54Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Struck By Cost Days
Taking a glass out of dishwasher, it broke in wkr's hand. 44,000$ 330
Holding door open for band member carrying an amp who banged against the door and wkr's hand on door knob was crushed between chair rail.
153,000$ 310
Acts of Violence, Force Cost Days
Guarding front door of club when a previously removed customer came back and shot worker with a gun.
41,000$ 240
Involved in altercation with agressive patrons, worker was punched in head 5 to 6 times. 15,000$ 300
Prevention Activity
107
120
101
65
94
2723 19 189
24
7
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
Compared to 2012, the number of Inspection Reports issued in Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge increased by 45% to 94 documents in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 27 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
55Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Prevention Orders
134
115
85 87 91
19
160
183
156
87
158
23
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
180
200
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge increased by 5% to 91 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 19 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
56Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Penalties & Warning Letters
0
3
1
0 0 0
1
0 0 0 0 00
0.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Warning Letters Sent Penalties Imposed
Between 2009 and 2014YTD, four warning letters were sent and one administrative penalty was imposed.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
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Pub, Bar, Night Club, or Lounge - CU # 761034
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
2009 - 2013 Profile
Classification Unit # 761038
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride
J UNE 30, 2014
59
Base Rates
Key Findings
60Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
In 2013, there were 42 employers in this industry, a 8% increase over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU remains higher than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks stayed the same in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 58% for Ski Hill or Gondola Ride vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU is significantly lower than all BC.
Program leaders and instructors in recreation, sport and fitness contribute the most claims in the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU.
There were 119 Prevention Orders issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, 10 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there was one work-related death.
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 42 employers in this industry, a 8% increase over the past four years.
61Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 263 $3,167,524 9,386 8.0 N/A 3,379 39 53 0
2010 252 $2,356,752 10,264 7.2 N/A 3,278 45 41 0
2011 236 $2,110,487 8,693 7.4 61% 3,061 44 32 0
2012 257 $3,032,505 9,912 7.8 58% 3,164 47 49 0
2013 232 $2,943,084 8,519 7.5 58% 3,090 43 38 1
Total 1,240 $13,610,352 46,774 7.6 (Avg) 59% (Avg) 3,194 (Avg) 43 (Avg) 213 1
2009 to 2013 % Change
-12% -7% -9% -6% N/A -9% 12% -28% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU remains higher than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
8.0
7.2 7.4 7.87.5
2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3
0.0
1.0
2.0
3.0
4.0
5.0
6.0
7.0
8.0
9.0
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
ymen
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Injury Rate - Ski Hill or Gondola Ride Injury Rate - All BC
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Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Claims and Employment Trends
269
237 228
246
231
3,379
3,278
3,061
3,164
3,090
2,900
3,000
3,100
3,200
3,300
3,400
3,500
200
210
220
230
240
250
260
270
280
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a slight decrease in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims decreased by 6%. This has resulted in a decrease in the Injury Rate for the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU in 2013.
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Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has increased by 1.4% in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU is significantly lower than all BC.
39
45 4447
43
55
59 60 6058
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride All BC
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Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Return to Work (RTW)
65Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
61% 58% 58%54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks stayed the same in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 58% for Ski Hill or Gondola Ride vs. 52% for all BC).
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Program leaders and instructors in recreation, sport and fitness 685 55%
Operators and attendants in amusement, recreation and sport 262 21%
Construction millwrights and industrial mechanics 32 3%
Janitors, caretakers and building superintendents 21 2%
Accommodation, travel, tourism and related services supervisors 18 1%
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations 16 1%
Outdoor sport and recreational guides 14 1%
Other service support occupations, n.e.c. 14 1%
Cooks 12 1%
Heavy-duty equipment mechanics 12 1%
Other 154 12%
Grand Total 1,240 100%
Program leaders and instructors in recreation, sport and fitness contribute the most claims in the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU.
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Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 0 0% 1 0% 1 0%
15 - 24 232 19% 159 13% 391 32%
25 - 34 278 22% 143 12% 421 34%
35 - 44 159 13% 50 4% 209 17%
45 - 54 101 8% 23 2% 124 10%
55 - 64 47 4% 21 2% 68 5%
65 and Over 19 2% 5 0% 24 2%
Total 836 67% 402 32% 1,238 100%
Male Female Total
* There are 2 claims where the age and gender were uncoded.
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
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Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 32%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 – 64) represent 15% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The majority of these claims were made by males.
Accident and Injury Type
Fall from Elevation 37% Fall from Elevation 52% Fall from Elevation 44%Fall on Same Level 15% Fall on Same Level 14% Other Bodily Motion 16%Other Bodily Motion 13% Struck By 11% Fall on Same Level 13%Overexertion 13% Other Bodily Motion 9% Struck By 11%Struck By 11% Struck Against 4% Overexertion 8%Other 11% Other 9% Other 8%
Other Strains 43% Fractures 39% Other Strains 47%Back Strain 15% Other Strains 34% Fractures 25%Fractures 14% Concussion 10% Concussion 9%Concussion 10% Back Strain 7% Back Strain 8%Contusion 8% Contusion 4% Dislocation 5%Other 10% Other 6% Other 6%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Fall from Elevation contributes the most to claims, costs, and days lost in the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU. The most common injury type is Other Strains, while Fractures contributes the most claim costs.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.68
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Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors
Working Surfaces, 585,
47%
Bodily Motion, 180, 15%
Miscellaneous, 75, 6%
People, 70, 6%
Vehicles, 67,5%
Other, 263, 21%
Source of Injury
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
69Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Knee, 267, 21%
Back, 210, 17%
Shoulders, 146, 12%
Head, 124, 10%
Wrist, Fingers & Hand, 109, 9%
Other, 384, 31%
Body Part Injured
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU combined for 213 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 18% of the claims in the Ski Hill or Gondola Ride CU and account for 50% of the claims cost paid to date.
Fall from Elevation 54% Fractures 63%
Fall on Same Level 18% Other Strains 12%
Other Bodily Motion 9% Concussion 10%
Struck By 7% Dislocation 5%
Struck Against 3% Laceration 3%
Other 8% Other 6%
Accident Type Injury Type
The serious injury claims in this CU are more likely to involve: fall from elevation, fractures.
70Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Serious Injury Claim Examples
71Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Fall on Same Level Cost Days
Wkr was skiing down mountain when lost control & fell hitting a tree. 30,000$ 160
Wkr slipped & fell on sidewalk. sidewalk was plowed but not salted or sanded. 15,000$ 90
Fall from Elevation Cost Days
Snowboarding between work stations, caught an edge and fell. 10,000$ 90
Wearing a helmet skiing down a run & ski got caught under the snow & wkr tripped & fell forward hitting head on hard packed snow.
51,000$ 210
Prevention Activity
39 3733
58
32
19
60
32
53
77
51
27
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
80
90
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
Compared to 2012, the number of Inspection Reports issued in Ski Hill or Gondola Ride decreased by 45% to 32 documents in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 19 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
72Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Prevention Orders
37
25
14
32
1
10
44
31
14
27
5 4
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
There were 119 Prevention Orders issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, 10 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
73Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Penalties & Warning Letters
0 0 0 0 0 0
1
0 0
1
0 00
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Warning Letters Sent Penalties Imposed
Between 2009 and 2014YTD, no warning letters were sent and two administrative penalties were imposed.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
74Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Ski Hill or Gondola Ride - CU # 761038
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
J UNE 30, 2014
2009 - 2013 Profile
Classification Unit # 761054
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere
specified)
76
2015 Base Rates
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Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Key Findings
In 2013, there were 29 employers in this industry, a 21% increase over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU decreased by 19.4% since the prior year.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks decreased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is lower than all BC (2013: 48% for Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU is similar to all-BC.
Operators and attendants in amusement, recreation and sport, security guards and related security service occupations, food and beverage servers, cashiers contributecontribute the most claims in the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU.
There were 117 Prevention Orders issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, 12 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there were no work-related deaths.
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 29 employers in this industry, a 21% increase over the past four years.
78Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 155 $885,251 7,360 3.1 N/A 4,702 50 13 0
2010 132 $835,278 5,158 2.5 N/A 4,792 44 8 0
2011 118 $961,322 5,728 2.4 62% 4,986 54 11 0
2012 130 $1,213,208 6,440 2.6 50% 4,671 59 6 0
2013 113 $1,690,104 6,145 2.1 48% 5,174 64 10 0
Total 648 $5,585,163 30,831 2.5 (Avg) 53% (Avg) 4,865 (Avg) 54 (Avg) 48 0
2009 to 2013 % Change
-27% 91% -17% -34% N/A 10% 29% -23% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU decreased by 19.4% since the prior year.
3.1
2.52.4
2.6
2.12.3 2.3 2.3 2.3
2.3
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
ymen
t
Injury Rate - Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specif ied)
Injury Rate - All BC
79Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Claims and Employment Trends
148
120 119 121
108
4,702
4,792
4,986
4,671
5,174
4,400
4,500
4,600
4,700
4,800
4,900
5,000
5,100
5,200
5,300
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a significant increase in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims decreased by 11%. This has resulted in a decrease in the Injury Rate for the Casino or Other Gaming Operations
80Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has increased by 6.7% in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU is similar to all-BC.
50
44
54
5964
55
59 60 6058
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) All BC
81Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Return to Work (RTW)
82Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
62%50% 48%
54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified)
All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks decreased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is lower than all BC (2013: 48% for Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) vs. 52% for all BC).
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Operators and attendants in amusement, recreation and sport 177 27%
Security guards and related security service occupations 71 11%
Food and beverage servers 66 10%
Cashiers 59 9%
Accommodation, travel, tourism and related services supervisors 56 9%
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations 41 6%
Cooks 41 6%
Casino occupations 36 6%
Chefs 17 3%
Bartenders 11 2%
Other 73 11%
Grand Total 648 100%
83Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Operators and attendants in amusement, recreation and sport, security guards and related security service occupations, food and beverage servers, cashiers contribute the most claims in the Casino
or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU.
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
15 - 24 28 4% 44 7% 72 11%
25 - 34 64 10% 83 13% 147 23%
35 - 44 53 8% 105 16% 158 24%
45 - 54 38 6% 142 22% 180 28%
55 - 64 30 5% 51 8% 81 13%
65 and Over 6 1% 4 1% 10 2%
Total 219 34% 429 66% 648 100%
Male Female Total
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
84Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 11%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 - 64) represent 41% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The majority of these claims were made by females.
Accident and Injury Type
Overexertion 25% Overexertion 34% Overexertion 27%Struck By 18% Fall on Same Level 13% Struck By 15%Fall on Same Level 17% Other Bodily Motion 13% Fall on Same Level 14%Other Bodily Motion 13% Struck By 12% Other Bodily Motion 13%Struck Against 7% Fall from Elevation 11% Fall from Elevation 12%Other 21% Other 17% Other 20%
Other Strains 40% Other Strains 46% Other Strains 42%Back Strain 21% Back Strain 15% Back Strain 14%Contusion 15% Contusion 10% Contusion 11%Laceration 8% Fractures 9% Tendinitis, Tenosynovitis 9%Tendinitis, Tenosynovitis 5% Concussion 7% Fractures 8%Other 13% Other 14% Other 16%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Overexertion contributes the most to claims, costs, and days lost in the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU. The most common injury type is Other Strains, which also contributes the most claim costs and days lost.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.85
Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors
Working Surfaces, 136,
21%
Boxes, Containers, 116,
18%
Bodily Motion, 113, 18%
Buildings & Structures, 52,
8%
Vehicles, 48, 7%
Other, 183, 28%
Source of Injury
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
86Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Wrist, Fingers & Hand, 147, 23%
Back, 136, 21%
Ankle, Toe & Feet, 73, 11%
Shoulders, 55, 8%
Knee, 37, 6%
Other, 200, 31%
Body Part Injured
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU combined for 48 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 8% of the claims in the Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) CU and account for 35% of the claims cost paid to date.
Struck By 31% Contusion 35%
Fall on Same Level 25% Fractures 31%
Struck Against 17% Laceration 13%
Fall from Elevation 10% Concussion 13%
Other Bodily Motion 8% Other Strains 4%
Other 8% Other 4%
Accident Type Injury Type
The serious injury claims in this CU are more likely to involve: struck by, struck against, contusions, fractures, concussions.
87Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Serious Injury Claim Examples
88Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Struck By Cost Days
Finger got crushed between the heavy doors of a vault. 11,000$ 110
Worker went to open a large cupboard/cupboard broke off and the corner of the cupboard struck worker in forehead/face.
13,000$ 190
Fall on Same Level Cost Days
Worker slipped and fell hitting head on the floor. 44,000$ 180
Slipped on icy ground and fell backwards hitting head on ground. 91,000$ 370
Prevention Activity
2224
38
30
17 16
5
18 17
23
11 12
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
There were 147 Inspection Reports issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, 16 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
89Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Prevention Orders
13
18
41
20
13 1214
23
42 41
20
10
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
There were 117 Prevention Orders issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, 12 Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
90Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Penalties & Warning Letters
0 0 0
1
0 00 0 0 0 0 00
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Warning Letters Sent Penalties Imposed
Between 2009 and 2014YTD, one warning letter was sent and no administrative penalties were imposed.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
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Casino or Other Gaming Operations (not elsewhere specified) - CU # 761054
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
2009 - 2013 Profile
Classification Unit # 761031
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility
J UNE 30, 2014
93
2015 Base Rates
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Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Key Findings
In 2013, there were 310 employers in this industry, a 3% increase over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU increased by 18% since the prior year.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks increased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 64% for Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU is significantly lower than all BC. Landscaping and grounds maintenance labourers, cooks contribute the most claims in the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU.
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility increased by 17% to 34 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, two Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there was one work-related death.
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 310 employers in this industry, a 3% increase over the past four years.
95Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 141 $762,481 4,195 2.3 N/A 6,099 33 16 0
2010 113 $1,365,921 3,509 1.9 N/A 5,840 33 12 1
2011 145 $938,721 4,026 2.5 64% 5,384 36 10 0
2012 109 $1,044,770 4,001 1.9 63% 5,358 35 8 0
2013 123 $1,056,617 3,705 2.3 64% 5,240 43 17 0
Total 631 $5,168,510 19,436 2.2 (Avg) 64% (Avg) 5,584 (Avg) 36 (Avg) 63 1
2009 to 2013 % Change
-13% 39% -12% 1% N/A -14% 29% 6% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU increased by 18% since the prior year.
2.3
1.9
2.5
1.9
2.32.3
2.3
2.3
2.3 2.3
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
ymen
t
Injury Rate - Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility
Injury Rate - All BC
96Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Claims and Employment Trends
138
112
135
104
120
6,099
5,840
5,384 5,358 5,240
4,800
5,000
5,200
5,400
5,600
5,800
6,000
6,200
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
160
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
97Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a slight decrease in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims increased by 15%. This has resulted in an increase in the Injury Rate for the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, orLawn Bowling Facility CU.
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has decreased by 0.05% in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
33 33
36 35
43
55
59 60 6058
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility All BC
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Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU is significantly lower than all BC.
Return to Work (RTW)
99Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
64% 63% 64%54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility
All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks increased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is higher than all BC (2013: 64% for Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility vs. 52% for all BC).
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Landscaping and grounds maintenance labourers 223 35%
Cooks 100 16%
Food and beverage servers 65 10%
Nursery and greenhouse workers 58 9%
Landscape and horticulture technicians and specialists 34 5%
Food counter attendants, kitchen helpers and related support occupations 24 4%
Janitors, caretakers and building superintendents 18 3%
Operators and attendants in amusement, recreation and sport 14 2%
Other small engine and small equipment repairers 12 2%
Restaurant and food service managers 10 2%
Other 73 12%
Grand Total 631 100%
Landscaping and grounds maintenance labourers, cooks contribute the most claims in the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU.
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Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
15 - 24 86 14% 62 10% 148 23%
25 - 34 71 11% 26 4% 97 15%
35 - 44 73 12% 31 5% 104 16%
45 - 54 95 15% 55 9% 150 24%
55 - 64 74 12% 26 4% 100 16%
65 and Over 31 5% 1 0% 32 5%
Total 430 68% 201 32% 631 100%
Male Female Total
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
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Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 23%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 - 64) represent 40% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The majority of these claims were made by males.
Accident and Injury Type
Overexertion 29% Overexertion 32% Overexertion 29%Struck By 19% Fall from Elevation 16% Fall on Same Level 18%Fall on Same Level 12% Fall on Same Level 14% Fall from Elevation 17%Fall from Elevation 8% Repetitive Motion 11% Struck By 9%Other Bodily Motion 8% Struck By 7% MVIs 7%Other 23% Other 20% Other 20%
Other Strains 25% Other Strains 25% Other Strains 28%Back Strain 25% Fractures 19% Back Strain 26%Laceration 14% Back Strain 16% Fractures 20%Contusion 12% Other Injuries 12% Contusion 8%Fractures 6% Tendinitis, Tenosynovitis 11% Tendinitis, Tenosynovitis 5%Other 18% Other 18% Other 14%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Overexertion contributes the most to claims, costs, and days lost in the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU. The most common injury type is Other Strains, which also contributes the most claim costs and days lost.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.102
Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors
Back, 160, 25%
Wrist, Fingers & Hand, 138, 22%
Ankle, Toe & Feet, 60, 10%
Knee, 46, 7%
Shoulders, 35, 6%
Other, 192, 30%
Body Part Injured
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
103Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Working Surfaces, 101,
16%
Hand Tools, 84, 13%
Vehicles, 77, 12%
Boxes, Containers, 76,
12%
Bodily Motion, 68, 11%
Other, 225, 36%Source of Injury
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU combined for 63 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 10% of the claims in the Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility CU and account for 49% of the claims cost paid to date.
Struck By 25% Fractures 46%
Fall on Same Level 25% Laceration 17%
Fall from Elevation 19% Back Strain 8%
Struck Against 11% Contusion 8%
MVIs 10% Amputation 6%
Other 10% Other 14%
Accident Type Injury Type
104Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
The serious injury claims in this CU are more likely to involve: struck by, falls, and fractures.
Serious Injury Claim Examples
105Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Struck By Cost Days
Wkr lifted a 40 lb reel, turned to walk to left, caught foot on the mower tire & twisted. 11,000$ 40
A bottle of wine fell off the shelf onto wkr's head. 24,000$ 140
Fall on Same Level Cost Days
Dining recently been mopped, wkr stepped into a wet spot, fell backwards. 45,000$ 130
Coming down the wooden ramp, slipped on ice & landed. 17,000$ 180
Work-Related Deaths
Year Occupation Description
2010 Landscape and horticulture technicians and specialistsFATAL - DISSECTING AORTIC ANEURYS - TRYING TO PRY A SHELF OFF THE WALL
106Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Prevention Activity
45
58
36 3439
67
23
14
6 8
2
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
Compared to 2012, the number of Inspection Reports issued in Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility increased by 15% to 39 documents in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, 6 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
107Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Prevention Orders
68
91
29 2934
2
72
100
42 38 34
10
20
40
60
80
100
120
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
108Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Compared to 2012, the number of Prevention Orders issued to employers in Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility increased by 17% to 34 orders in 2013. As of June 30, 2014, two Prevention Orders have been issued year-
to-date.
Penalties & Warning Letters
0
1
0
1
0 00 0 0 0 0 00
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
1.2
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Warning Letters Sent Penalties Imposed
Between 2009 and 2014YTD, two warning letters were sent and no administrative penalties were imposed.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
109Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Golf Course, Driving Range, Pitch and Putt, or Lawn Bowling Facility - CU # 761031
Prepared by: Business Information and Analysis (BIA)
2009 - 2013 Profile
Classification Unit # 761028
Outdoor Sport Tour
J UNE 30, 2014
Key Findings
111Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
From 2009 to 2014 YTD, no Warning Letters were sent and no Penalties were imposed.
In 2013, there were 442 employers in this industry, a 3% increase over the past four years.
The Injury Rate for the Outdoor Sport Tour CU remains higher than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks increased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is lower than all BC (2013: 47% for Outdoor Sport Tour vs. 52% for all BC).
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Outdoor Sport Tour CU is significantly higher than all BC.
Outdoor sport and recreational guides contribute the most claims in the Outdoor Sport Tour CU.
There were 74 Prevention Orders issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, no Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Between 2009 and 2014 YTD, there was one work-related death.
2015 Base Rates
112Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Statistical Overview
* Note: The Claim Cost Paid and Work Days Lost relate to the claims from all years of injury and are not just the results of the given year's claims.
** Note: Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
In 2013, there were 442 employers in this industry, a 3% increase over the past four years.
113Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Year STD/LTD/Fatal
ClaimsClaim Cost
Paid*Work Days
Lost*
Injury Rate (per 100 person-years of employment)
Return to Work (<=4 weeks)
Person YearsSTD Duration (Average Days Lost per Claim)
Serious Injuries**
Work-Related Deaths
2009 43 $697,256 4,213 3.1 N/A 1,246 100 10 0
2010 50 $624,867 3,880 4.6 N/A 1,230 90 9 0
2011 47 $1,355,770 3,979 3.5 52% 1,255 85 9 1
2012 39 $1,080,399 3,243 3.0 36% 1,269 121 11 0
2013 58 $648,658 3,961 3.5 47% 1,558 106 10 0
Total 237 $4,406,949 19,276 3.5 (Avg) 45% (Avg) 1,312 (Avg) 103 (Avg) 49 1
2009 to 2013 % Change
35% -7% -6% 13% N/A 25% 6% 0% N/A
Injury Rate Trend
The Injury Rate for the Outdoor Sport Tour CU remains higher than the Injury Rate for all BC CUs combined.
3.1
4.6
3.5
3.0
3.5
2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3 2.3
0.0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
4.5
5.0
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Tim
e-lo
ss C
laim
s p
er 1
00 P
erso
n-y
ears
of
Em
plo
ymen
t
Injury Rate - Outdoor Sport Tour Injury Rate - All BC
114Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Claims and Employment Trends
39
56
44
38
55
1,246
1,230 1,255
1,2691,558
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Per
son
Yea
rs
Tim
e-L
oss
Cla
ims
# Time-Loss Claims Person Years
115Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Meanwhile, the assessable payroll has increased by 24.9% in 2013.
The estimated number of workers (Person Years) saw a significant increase in 2013, whereas the number of time-loss claims increased by 45%. This has resulted in an increase in the Injury Rate for the Outdoor Sport Tour CU in 2013.
STD Duration – Five Year Trend
The average Short-Term Disability Duration (work days lost per claim) for the Outdoor Sport Tour CU is significantly higher than all BC.
100
90 85
121
106
5559 60 60 58
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
Ave
rag
e S
ho
rt-t
erm
Dis
abil
ity
Day
s p
er C
laim
Outdoor Sport Tour All BC
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Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Return to Work (RTW)
117Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
52%
36%47%
54% 53% 52%
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
2011 2012 2013
% of Claims Returning to Work within 4 Weeks
Outdoor Sport Tour All BC
The percentage of workers returning to work within 4 weeks increased in 2013 compared to 2012 and is lower than all BC (2013: 47% for Outdoor Sport Tour vs. 52% for all BC).
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Occupations (Top 10)% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Occupation Type # of Claims % of Claims
Outdoor sport and recreational guides 143 60%
Tour and travel guides 26 11%
Program leaders and instructors in recreation, sport and fitness 8 3%
Light duty cleaners 4 2%
Chefs 4 2%
Operators and attendants in amusement, recreation and sport 4 2%
Water transport deck and engine room crew 4 2%
Heavy-duty equipment mechanics 4 2%
Photographers 3 1%
Other trades helpers and labourers 3 1%
Other 34 14%
Grand Total 237 100%
Outdoor sport and recreational guides contribute the most claims in the Outdoor Sport Tour CU.
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Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Age and Gender
Age # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims # of Claims % of Claims
0 - 14 0 0% 0 0% 0 0%
15 - 24 24 10% 34 14% 58 24%
25 - 34 61 26% 30 13% 91 38%
35 - 44 35 15% 7 3% 42 18%
45 - 54 25 11% 7 3% 32 14%
55 - 64 11 5% 2 1% 13 5%
65 and Over 1 0% 0 0% 1 0%
Total 157 66% 80 34% 237 100%
Male Female Total
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
119Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Young Workers (aged 15-24) represent 24%, while Mature Workers (aged 45 - 64) represent 19% of the total STD/LTD/Fatal claims. The majority of these claims were made by males.
Accident and Injury Type
Fall from Elevation 25% Struck By 29% Fall from Elevation 22%Overexertion 22% Fall from Elevation 28% Struck By 15%Struck By 14% Overexertion 10% Overexertion 15%Other Bodily Motion 11% Fall on Same Level 6% Fall on Same Level 10%Fall on Same Level 9% Caught In 6% Other Bodily Motion 9%Other 20% Other 21% Other 30%
Other Strains 44% Fractures 40% Other Strains 49%Back Strain 16% Other Strains 31% Fractures 23%Fractures 12% Concussion 10% Back Strain 13%Contusion 9% Back Strain 10% Concussion 3%Laceration 5% Laceration 2% Contusion 3%Other 13% Other 6% Other 9%
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Accident Type
Claims Claim Costs Work Days Lost
Injury Type
Fall from Elevation contributes the most claims, while Struck By contributes the most to claim costs in the Outdoor Sport Tour CU. The most common injury type is Other Strains, while Fractures contributes the most claim costs.
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.120
Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
Other Injury Factors% STD/LTD/Fatal Claims, 2009 - 2013 Profile
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Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
* Note: Uncoded claim costs have been proportionally allocated to coded categories.
Serious Injury Claims
*Serious Injuries include time-loss claims that represent either a serious medical diagnosis, or a potentially-serious medical diagnosis with a long recovery period of 50+ days paid (10+ weeks off work). Serious Injuries also include all work-related death claims.
Between 2009 and 2013, the Outdoor Sport Tour CU combined for 49 Serious Injury Claims*. Serious Injuries represent 21% of the claims in the Outdoor Sport Tour CU and account for 45% of the claims cost paid to date.
Fall from Elevation 29% Fractures 51%
Struck By 16% Other Strains 12%
Overexertion 10% Laceration 8%
Fall on Same Level 10% Concussion 8%
Other Bodily Motion 10% Dislocation 8%
Other 24% Other 12%
Accident Type Injury Type
The serious injury claims in this CU are more likely to involve: fractures.
122Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Serious Injury Claim Examples
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Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Fall from Elevation Cost Days
Worker hopped onto a horse and the horse pulled away causing worker to fall and landed onto a stump.
14,000$ 210
Fell from a height of approx 20 ft, building new zipline, landed on hip on rock. 12,000$ 50
Struck By Cost Days
Worker stabbed self in hand while cutting up moose. 26,000$ 120
Work-Related Deaths
Year Occupation Description
2011 Outdoor sport and recreational guidesFATAL - HELI-SKI GUIDE STOPPED TO TAKE A PHOTOGRAPH ON THE SWANSON GLACIER FELL INTO A DEEP CREVASSE WHEN SNOW BENEATH GAVE WAY
124Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Prevention Activity
1614
29
25
16
3
16
13
31
21
14 13
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Inspection Reports Other Contacts
There were 103 Inspection Reports issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, 3 Inspection Reports have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
125Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
Prevention Orders
12
16
35
2
9
0
28
1417
42
8
00
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Prevention Orders Order Follow-Ups
There were 74 Prevention Orders issued between 2009 and 2014YTD. As of June 30, 2014, no Prevention Orders have been issued year-to-date.
Note: 2014 is currently June YTD.
126Prepared by Business Information & Analysis, WorkSafeBC
Outdoor Sport Tour - CU # 761028
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