Your crew lands a six-week turbine overhaul contract in Kamloops. The project scope is locked, travel is booked, and your millwrights are ready to mobilize. Then the call comes: “WorkSafeBC flagged your registration status. Your workers can’t access the site until this is resolved.”
What follows is a scramble that costs you $15,000 in delayed mobilization, rushed registration fees, and a client relationship that never fully recovers. The project eventually proceeds—but with a 40% markup on emergency compliance consultants and zero margin left on the job.
This scenario plays out regularly for Alberta contractors expanding into BC. The New West Partnership Trade Agreement (NWPTA) promises seamless interprovincial mobility for certified tradespersons, but the administrative reality involves overlapping WCB jurisdictions, construction-specific obligations, and cumulative tracking rules that catch experienced contractors off guard.
This guide breaks down exactly when Alberta coverage ends and BC registration begins, what triggers immediate compliance obligations, and how to structure cross-border operations without the compliance failures that turn profitable contracts into expensive lessons.
The NWPTA does what it promises: an Alberta-certified millwright can work in BC without re-certification. Their Red Seal travels with them. Their trade qualifications are recognized.
What the NWPTA doesn’t cover is workers’ compensation. WCB Alberta and WorkSafeBC operate as separate systems with different rules, different rates, and different enforcement mechanisms. The interprovincial agreements that coordinate these systems have specific thresholds and triggers that create compliance obligations independent of trade certification.
Understanding where these boundaries fall prevents the costly surprises that derail cross-provincial projects.
WorkSafeBC applies cumulative tracking rules that catch contractors who assume occasional BC work stays under the radar.
Any Alberta employer whose workers spend 15 or more working days in BC within a calendar year must register with WorkSafeBC. This threshold applies to the employer’s total BC presence—not per worker, not per project. Four millwrights working four days each on a single job hits the threshold.
Even if you stay under 15 days total, making three or more separate trips to BC with 10 or more cumulative working days triggers mandatory registration. A contractor sending crews for three short shutdown support jobs—four days, three days, four days—crosses this threshold.
Certain activities require WorkSafeBC registration regardless of duration:
The last point matters more than contractors realize. WCB Alberta coverage has limits that, once exceeded, leave workers technically uncovered—triggering immediate WorkSafeBC registration requirements.
| Scenario | Days in BC | Visits | Registration Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| One 12-day shutdown | 12 | 1 | No |
| Two 8-day shutdowns | 16 | 2 | Yes (exceeds 15 days) |
| Three 4-day service calls | 12 | 3 | Yes (10+ days across 3+ visits) |
| One 20-day project | 20 | 1 | Yes (exceeds 15 days) |
WorkSafeBC actively audits out-of-province employers. Since 2016, enforcement has identified 3,251 unregistered employers and recovered $14.4 million in unpaid premiums and penalties.
Alberta contractors often assume WCB Alberta coverage automatically extends to work performed in other provinces. This assumption is partially correct—and the limitations create significant exposure.
WCB Alberta provides automatic extraterritorial coverage for workers temporarily assigned outside Alberta for up to 12 continuous months. No application required. The coverage follows the worker as long as three conditions remain true:
The 12-month period resets when the worker returns to Alberta and resumes work there. Vacation time or sick leave during the out-of-province assignment does not reset the counter—only actual return to Alberta-based work duties.
Workers who exceed 12 continuous months outside Alberta lose automatic coverage extension. At that point, the employer must either:
Failure to do either leaves workers without valid coverage—creating liability exposure for the employer and triggering WorkSafeBC registration requirements.
WCB Alberta extraterritorial coverage protects workers. It does not eliminate WorkSafeBC registration requirements when threshold triggers are met. An Alberta contractor with valid WCB Alberta coverage who exceeds 15 working days in BC still needs WorkSafeBC registration—they’re now covered under two systems, with premiums allocated according to Interjurisdictional Agreement rules.
Construction projects in BC carry additional compliance requirements beyond basic WorkSafeBC registration.
BC requires formal Notice of Project (NOP) submission for construction projects meeting specific criteria.
Cost threshold: Projects with total estimated costs (labour plus materials) of $100,000 or more require NOP submission.
Timeline: Standard NOP must be submitted at least 24 hours before work begins. Tower crane projects require 14 days advance notice. Projects involving hazardous substances require 48 hours advance notice and 10-year document retention.
High-risk activities: Certain work triggers NOP requirements regardless of project cost:
Missing NOP submission doesn’t just create paperwork problems—it exposes contractors to enforcement action and can complicate claim processing if injuries occur.
Multi-employer BC construction sites require Prime Contractor designation. This isn’t optional guidance—it’s a statutory requirement under the Workers Compensation Act.
What Prime Contractor means: The designated entity assumes coordination responsibility for occupational health and safety across all employers and workers at the site. This includes ensuring every employer and worker complies with OHS requirements.
How designation works: The owner and directing contractor must establish Prime Contractor designation in writing. Without a written agreement, the owner becomes Prime Contractor by default—often without realizing the liability they’ve assumed.
Coordination duties: When five or more workers are present, the Prime Contractor must appoint a qualified coordinator, post a site drawing identifying work areas and emergency contacts, and establish documented emergency procedures.
Alberta contractors accepting Prime Contractor status on BC projects assume significant obligations beyond their own crew’s compliance.
The Interjurisdictional Agreement between Canadian workers’ compensation boards prevents employers from paying premiums twice for the same work. Understanding how it operates helps contractors manage cross-provincial costs.
When workers perform duties in multiple provinces, employers allocate assessable payroll to each jurisdiction based on where the work is performed. The formula can be applied weekly, daily, or as earnings-based calculations.
The key principle: premiums flow to the jurisdiction where injuries would be covered. An Alberta worker injured on a BC jobsite—where the employer is properly registered with both boards—generates a BC claim, regardless of which province the worker calls home.
Trucking and transportation operations face unique challenges with multi-jurisdictional work. The Alternative Assessment Procedure (AAP) allows qualifying employers to pay premiums only to the WCB in the province where each worker resides, while maintaining zero-premium registrations in other jurisdictions.
AAP application deadline falls on February 28 each year for the current coverage period.
Compliance failures in cross-provincial operations create financial exposure that far exceeds the cost of proper registration and coordination.
WorkSafeBC can assess retroactive premiums for the entire period an employer operated without proper registration. There’s no statutory limitation period—assessments can reach back years.
The financial hit includes:
A contractor who operated unregistered in BC for three years while exceeding thresholds faces premium assessments potentially reaching six figures, plus penalties and interest.
Beyond premium recovery, WorkSafeBC issues administrative penalties for registration failures. In 2024 alone, the board issued 361 administrative penalties totalling $7.6 million.
Base penalties start at 0.5% of assessable payroll (minimum $1,250). Multipliers apply for high-risk industries, intentional non-compliance, and repeat violations. The 2025 statutory maximum per penalty is $798,867.87. The largest recorded penalty in WorkSafeBC history reached $1,011,639.62.
Unregistered employers bear full financial responsibility for any claims arising during unregistered periods. This means covering:
A single serious injury on a BC site without proper registration can generate claim costs exceeding $500,000. Construction slip-trip-fall incidents alone account for 440,000 lost workdays and $148 million in annual costs across BC—each incident representing potential employer liability when registration requirements aren’t met.
Alberta-certified first aid attendants require additional credentialing to serve as designated attendants on BC worksites.
WorkSafeBC requires Alberta-certified attendants to complete a BC Out-of-Jurisdiction Jurisprudence Package before serving as designated first aid attendants. This isn’t a full recertification—it’s a supplementary module covering BC-specific regulations and procedures.
| Alberta Certification | BC Equivalent |
|---|---|
| Emergency/Basic First Aid | OFA Level 1 (Basic) |
| Standard/Intermediate (post-July 2, 2024) | OFA Level 2 (Intermediate) |
| Advanced First Aid | OFA Level 3 (Advanced) |
All BC first aid certificates expire after three years with no extensions available. Alberta paramedics must obtain BC EMALB licensure before completing the jurisprudence package.
Deploying crews to BC without ensuring first aid attendant compliance creates both regulatory exposure and genuine safety gaps when response is needed.
Effective cross-provincial deployment requires proactive compliance management, not reactive scrambling when projects arise.
90+ days before BC work:
30 days before BC work:
14 days before BC work:
Day of mobilization:
The 15-day and 10-day/3-visit thresholds require cumulative tracking across all BC work throughout the calendar year. Manual tracking fails when multiple projects and crews operate simultaneously.
Effective tracking includes:
The tracking burden increases with operational scale—but so does the cost of getting it wrong.
Navigating WCB jurisdictions, registration thresholds, and construction-specific requirements requires systematic attention to regulatory details that most facility managers and contractors would rather spend on actual operations.
Regional Staffing Solutions maintains pre-verified compliance documentation for skilled trades professionals deployed across Western Canada. Our millwrights and industrial mechanics arrive at BC worksites with current certifications, valid coverage verification, and documentation that passes site access requirements without delay.
For Alberta operations expanding into BC—whether for emergency shutdowns, planned turnarounds, or ongoing maintenance contracts—RSS eliminates the compliance coordination that derails project timelines:
No placement fees. Transparent cost-plus pricing. Pre-trained professionals who arrive ready to work—not ready to trigger compliance failures at the gate.
Ready to discuss cross-provincial workforce deployment?
Contact Regional Staffing Solutions to learn how we support Alberta contractors operating in BC with compliance-verified skilled trades professionals.