Skip to content

Province set to expand cancer coverage for firefighters

Firefighters die of cancer four times more than the general population, says Ontario government
47b61793c35e0e7e5d694ea66a65d6a57e3c2755ceb607e734fa762f45006078
Firefighters in Ontario are set to get easier access to Workplace Safety and Insurance Board coverage for certain cancers. Firefighters from the Ottawa Fire Service work the scene of an early morning gas leak explosion in the Orleans area of Ottawa, on Monday, Feb. 13, 2023. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

Firefighters in Ontario are set to get easier access to Workplace Safety and Insurance Board coverage for certain cancers.

Premier Doug Ford says firefighters and investigators make major sacrifices to keep communities, property and families safe and the province should always have their backs.

The government says firefighters die of cancer at a rate up to four times higher than the general population.

Among the changes announced today as part of upcoming legislation, firefighters with kidney cancer would receive presumptive coverage if they have worked as a firefighter for 10 years, down from the current 20-year requirement.

Presumptive coverage means a worker's injury or disease is assumed to be work-related, which makes the claims process faster.

As well, the province is proposing to remove a requirement that a firefighter’s colorectal cancer diagnosis must be made before the age of 61.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 22, 2024.

Allison Jones, The Canadian Press