Ontario has officially debuted a new digital Occupational Exposure Registry (OER), making it the first province in Canada to provide workers with a dedicated platform to track workplace hazards. This tool addresses a long-standing gap in labor safety: the “latency period” of occupational diseases, which often take years or decades to manifest.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!What the Registry Does
- Hazard Tracking: Workers can log exposure to high-risk substances like asbestos, silica, lead, and mercury.
- Detailed Documentation: Users can record the duration of exposure, the specific task being performed, and whether protective equipment (PPE) was provided.
- WSIB Support: By maintaining a digital paper trail, workers have a much stronger foundation for future Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) claims if they become ill later in life.
Privacy and Security
- Worker-Owned: Employers do not have access to an individual’s personal logs.
- ServiceOntario Integration: The system uses secure login protocols to protect sensitive health and employment data.
- Research Benefits: Aggregated, anonymous data from the registry will help the Ministry of Labour identify “hot spots” for hazardous work and improve provincial safety regulations.
Summary of Benefits
| Feature | Benefit |
| Portability | The record follows you from job to job for your entire career. |
| Evidence | Provides a timestamped record that is harder to dispute years later. |
| Health Awareness | Encourages workers to stay informed about the risks of specific materials. |
















