
Ontario’s “As of Right” Labour Mobility Rules Are Here. Your OHS Due Diligence Isn’t Going Anywhere.
Starting January 1, 2026, Ontario brought in new “As of Right” labour mobility regulations designed to reduce interprovincial barriers and help employers access qualified, in-demand workers faster.
From a workforce planning standpoint, that’s a big deal—especially in construction, engineering, and other sectors where projects don’t wait for paperwork.
From a health & safety standpoint, here’s the key message:
Faster mobility does not mean “auto-approved for Ontario worksites.” Workers and employers still have to meet Ontario’s OHS requirements—fully.
Let’s break down what’s changing, what isn’t, and what smart employers should do next.
What “As of Right” Means (In Plain Language)
Under the new approach, certified professionals from other provinces/territories can begin working in Ontario within 10 business days—once the relevant Ontario regulator confirms their credentials and any requirements.
The government has described this as applying across 50+ regulatory authorities and 300+ certifications.
Examples that have been explicitly mentioned include architects, engineers, geoscientists, land surveyors, and electricians—along with other certified professions.
Ontario is also expanding the “as of right” approach in health care (and moving toward easier/automatic recognition for certain roles like physicians and nurses who are in good standing elsewhere), but the big takeaway for most employers is the same: credential recognition is getting faster.
What This Does Not Mean: “You’re Good to Go on Ontario OHS”
Here’s where we see confusion creep in.
“As of Right” is about labour mobility and credential recognition—not a magic wand that changes workplace responsibilities.
Even with quicker entry to work, Ontario employers still have legal duties to protect workers and ensure compliance. And workers—whether they’re from Ontario or out-of-province—still need to be trained, oriented, and competent for the Ontario workplace they’re entering.
Think of it like this:
A credential gets someone to the starting line. Competency gets them across the finish line safely.
And “competency” isn’t just a résumé item—it’s demonstrated ability, supported by training, supervision, and site-specific onboarding.
Why Ontario-Specific Training Still Matters (A Lot)
Even when someone is highly skilled, safety gaps often happen in the details:
- Different terminology and role expectations
- Different regulatory frameworks
- Different project documentation requirements
- Different site norms and enforcement patterns
- Different “what counts as due diligence” practices
For employers, relying on “they’ve done this elsewhere” is not a defensible safety strategy. It’s an assumption. And assumptions are where incidents live.
The goal should be simple: make it easy for skilled workers to ramp up quickly, without compromising safety or compliance.
A Practical “Day 1–10” Onboarding Checklist for Out-of-Province Workers
If you’re bringing in newly mobile workers under “As of Right,” here’s a straightforward way to reduce risk while keeping onboarding efficient.
1) Confirm what’s been confirmed
- Document the regulator’s confirmation and any conditions.
- Clarify scope-of-practice and supervision requirements (if applicable).
2) Deliver Ontario OHS orientation (don’t skip this)
- Ontario OHSA basics and worker rights & responsibilities
- Employer expectations for reporting, stop-work, and escalation
3) Cover role- and site-specific hazards
- Your site hazard assessment (not a generic one)
- Controls, procedures, and emergency response
- Project rules that differ from what they may be used to
4) Ensure mandatory training is current and appropriate
Depending on the work environment, this may include things like:
- WHMIS / hazardous products
- Work at heights / fall protection
- Equipment-specific competency (e.g., lift trucks, MEWPs)
- Supervisor/constructor/contractor responsibilities where relevant
(Exact requirements vary by role and workplace—build the training plan around the actual work being done.)
5) Validate competency, don’t just “deliver training”
- Quick field verification (observations, sign-offs, practical checks)
- Clear supervision plan for the first days/weeks
- Document, document, document
CrossSafety’s Perspective: This Change Is an Opportunity—If You Do It Right
We like anything that helps get qualified people into critical roles faster—especially when Ontario has major projects on the go and talent shortages in key areas.
But speed only helps if you keep the standard high.
The best employers will treat “As of Right” as a chance to build a repeatable onboarding system that:
- gets workers productive quickly,
- keeps projects moving,
- and reduces risk through consistent training + verification.
If you don’t already have that system, this regulation is basically a flashing neon sign that says:
“Now’s the time.”
How CrossSafety Can Help
If you’re bringing in out-of-province certified workers (or you expect to in 2026), we can support you with:
- Ontario-focused OHS onboarding and compliance training
- Supervisor and worker competency programs
- Site-specific orientation builds (your hazards, your procedures, your paperwork)
- Program audits and due diligence support
- Ongoing safety staffing and program support when you need extra hands
Because the point isn’t to slow you down. It’s to make sure speed doesn’t become the thing that bites you later.
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