Jody Young vs. Workplace Tragedy

Jody Young vs. Workplace Tragedy A Career Spent Fighting for Safer Jobs Young on cultures of “top-down safety”. By Luke Hillenbrand Facebook Twitter LinkedIn “Every worker should go to work and come home in the same shape they left.” Jody Young has spent 35 years in health and safety. She has shaped policies. She has enforced compliance. She has made a real impact on workplace safety in Canada. Her career spans both public and private sectors. That gives her a unique depth of experience. Now, she leads Workplace Safety and Prevention Services (WSPS). Over the years, she has watched safety regulations evolve. She has seen the challenges companies face in protecting their workers. And she knows what happens when they fail. She has witnessed the ripple effects of unsafe workplaces. The long-term consequences don’t just impact injured workers. Families suffer. Communities feel the loss. A single lapse in safety can lead to lawsuits, financial ruin, and immeasurable grief. For Young, this is more than just a job. It’s a quest to make a difference through prevention. From Environmental Science to Safety Leadership Young was an environmental science student at the University of Toronto. She took a summer placement in a mining company’s environment and health and safety department. That experience changed everything. She saw how safety could mean the difference between life and death. She started out in industrial hygiene testing, both underground and in surface plants. WHMIS was just being introduced, and she helped with surveys and training. Over time, employers sought professionals who understood both environmental and safety compliance. That demand worked in her favor. She landed key job opportunities and spent years in the private sector. Mining. Abrasives manufacturing. Construction. Waste handling. Paint manufacturing. Each industry had its own risks. She saw workers injured. She saw how preventable incidents disrupted lives. When safety failed, workers – and their families – paid the price. Then she moved into the public sector. She worked for labour ministries in Ontario and Alberta. That’s when she saw how big an impact compliance and enforcement could have. ————————————————————————— “I felt that I could actually make a bigger impact in safety. The results were immediate, and you could see the difference.” Jody Young ————————————————————————— She saw it firsthand—investigations, fines, court cases, and families left broken by a single moment. Every injury, every fatality, reinforced her mission. Her work didn’t stop at enforcing laws. She worked with businesses to help them improve safety practices. She connected employers with best practices. Following regulations wasn’t enough. They had to build safer workplaces. She connected businesses with government agencies. Together, they built a stronger safety culture. A Personal Mission For Young, safety isn’t just a career. It’s personal. “My own father suffered a life-altering accident in his workplace. I’ve always only known my father with one leg,” she says. That reality shaped her perspective. She understood what workplace injuries did to families. Her work as an investigator made her passion even stronger. She has sat with families who lost loved ones. She has guided them through investigations and court cases. She has been in their homes, held their hands, and seen their grief up close. These moments fueled her mission. No worker should suffer because an employer cut corners or simply lacked awareness. No child should grow up without a parent because a company ignored basic safety measures. Young has also worked with injured workers. She has seen the physical and emotional toll. People who once thrived in their jobs now struggle with pain, disability, and financial instability. These stories stay with her. She believes the best way to prevent tragedies is to foster a culture where safety is valued from the top down. That means pushing for strong leadership commitment. Encouraging open dialogue about risks. Creating policies that go beyond the bare minimum to truly protect workers. The Role of WSPS in Ontario’s Safety System Today, Young leads WSPS, a key player in Ontario’s health and safety system. She describes WSPS as part of a three-legged stool. The Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) handles compensation and return to work and supports prevention. The Ministry of Labour, Immigration, Training and Skills Development sets, communicates and enforces occupational health and safety requirements. WSPS’ role is to focus on providing training and consulting services to prevent workplace injuries and illnesses. “We have an important mandate set out in legislation,” Young explains. “We are part of the prevention system funded by employer premiums collected through the WSIB.” WSPS works directly with businesses. They help develop safety programs. They conduct risk assessments. They offer hands-on training. The goal is simple—stop accidents before they happen. WSPS provides guidance on everything from machine safety and robotics to workplace violence and harassment and mental health. They help small businesses create safety programs that are legislatively compliant. WSPS’ sector specific training programs and onsite services teach employers and workers to spot risks early. The goal: stop tragedies before they happen. Young emphasizes that WSPS doesn’t just offer services—it builds relationships. Companies that work with WSPS get expert assistance in building their safety programs. Safety isn’t just a checklist. It becomes part of how they operate. She sees it firsthand. Companies that embrace safety run better. Workers stay longer. Morale improves. Productivity rises. A Moral Obligation Young has one core belief: Every worker should go to work and come home in the same shape they left. She sees safety as a duty, not a burden. ————————————————————————— “It’s not just about avoiding fines. Employers must protect their workers. The cost of failure is too high. People’s lives are at stake.” Jody Young ————————————————————————— Safety isn’t just about compliance. It’s about culture. Workers need to feel safe speaking up. Leaders need to act before accidents happen. Companies that invest in safety see fewer injuries. But they also see higher morale and better productivity. She knows that some businesses still resist safety measures. They see them as costly. Time-consuming. Bureaucratic. But she also knows that one accident