Gateway to Northwestern Ontario Digital Collections

Terrace Bay News, 12 Oct 1972, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE 10 S & = 0 nRB oo 4 > ETS 7 ot hr wv 0) + WE CoC OO & Cc ET DO wn @ > 0 Eel gil) OS 5 oo € Oo OO -- = Sa oO 1%} DoE no> HEE E90 Bie & Iv} c oo 882 SEE 8 co oC o= cel2= 22 00 0. od COD E25 SZ o E [o} Oo ,'5g8w @ Neth Tat oor pis = on yn O.p BO 2ig 5 Jo i Bld €.00c BE & Sur SE 8582 ok Ora 50UFEOC pL colle S08 «. == Se = 585 8D OO >X0 2 «> BUY CANADA SAVINGS BONDS START SOMETHING GOOD TODAY GO AHEAD? oT EQ o0 ET o> 02 o > 22220 Ts tole TE Be ogi ETS oO EZS Sx TE Ee 2% gr 2S LET [23 > 23 28:22:50.0 DE BO ™>Y RON c 0 agp B OO Ela 3 iE 19s DH + Oo € 0B 8 g--gz &n E> og Eg 2.86 OE Sw 5 253508 [) tAg8gL3® 50258870 VEE B0 > & NL£0 5 O Ooms E o (a) for cash where you work, bank or invest to maturity. Each $100 bond begins Go ahead! Start something good (b) on instalments through the Payroll today! Buy Canada Savings Bonds. Savings Plan where you work (c) or on instalments through the Monthly Savings Plan where you bank or invest. its 4 .T2fa. 0 > 0.0 pT oO o= 0 3 0B .c .S cid > E+ Oo 0 wO c= -- p= 4 oO ON a dil pr Se ll Ra -SHn 2S [)) [0] bi Bou oe - = 0.5 -- . X c£ ©» I 0.0.0 © go O we Cl, Egy © Pll gS > tBu. 0D. .o Soo0o+-- 00x rod WOR f-- 5008s 3 2 +=+= CL DEG CAE EHD v} DS ing nfilt, E00 im Bem 5-006 < GN © 0 T+ W HITE X02 gd 'ca Vy PE Lo Sean OD CF) x 38980 ES Si Gu wd 0 .E WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION = cont'd have increased substantially; the Ontario Workmen's Compensation Board's medical treatment and rehabi- litation facilities have long been recognized as among the most advanced of their kind, a system which is studied and copied by jurisdictions around the world; the area of coverage has been greatly broadened, for example with the Ontario Board's early recognition that a working injury included industrial disease brought on by long term exposure to certain working enviroments. But the above, if you will, are the mechanics of the system, the tools with which Ontario's Workmen's Compensation Board achieves its goals. The basic approach remains that recommended by Sir Wiliam and framed into law by the province's legislators in 1914. To administer the Workmen's Compensation system, the 1914 Act established The Workmen's Compen- sation Board, Ontario, an autonomous body charged with carrying out specifics of the Act and its regu- lations in an independent, objective manner. The Act and its regulations establish the benefits - financial, medical and rehabilitation = to which an injured workman is entitled. It is the Board's res- ponsibility to make certain an injured workman gets his full entitlement. "Gets his full entitlement!" When you say it quickly it sounds a bit cold and detached. One gets the impression of someone making a few mathe- * matical calculations, calling for a series of cheques and then closing out a file. This may be close fo reality in the case of minor injuries, but it is by no means typical. In one of the Board's most important responsibilities - vocational rehabilitation of the | disable - the system established over the years has built up an effective and valuable rapport with injured workmen, making their rehabilitation a Continued page 11 «co.cc...

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy