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Member Profile

Join date: Apr 5, 2023

About

Jordan Tesluk conducts health and safety audits under the BC SAFE Companies Program and Alberta Partners in Injury Reduction. As Safety Advocate, he meets with employers to assist them in adapting health and safety resources to improve their workplaces, and serves as a liaison among regulatory agencies, workers, and employers.


Jordan started his career in foresty in 1992 when he set out tree planting in Northern BC. He worked as a tree planter and first aid coordinator while attending university, with his Masters research focusing on health and safety regulation in silviculture. During this time, he sat on various industry committees and presented on various health and safety topics at annual WFCA conferences. In 2007, Jordan joined the BC SAFE Companies Program as an external safety auditor, and expanded his work into other areas of industry, including harvesting, foresty and industrial consulting, marine and aviation operations related to forestry, and agriculture.


In 2018, Jordan began his work as the Forestry Safety Advocate with the goal of sharing resources from the SAFE Forestry Program more widely among employers in Western Canada. This work took on a more centralized communication and coordination role during the COVID-19 pandemic to develop safe operating guidelines and secure access to services.

Overview

First Name
Jordan
Last Name
Tesluk
Pronouns
he/him/his
Position
Forestry Safety Advocate

Jordan Tesluk

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© WFCA 2023

Members of the Cache project team are grateful to live, work, and be in relationship with people from across many traditional and unceded territories, covering all parts of the land known as British Columbia, Canada. We thoughtfully offer this acknowledgement recognizing that reconciliation with Indigenous Peoples' is a commitment we all share as Canadians. We are grateful to live on this land and are committed to reconciliation, decolonization, and building relationships in our communities and workplaces. Land acknowledgements are one small step towards reconciling the relationships between settlers and Indigenous Peoples, in Canada. Colonialism is a current and ongoing process. Being mindful of our participation is another step on the path of healing. Learn more about land acknowledgements and moving beyond them here: https://native-land.ca/resources/territory-acknowledgement/

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