Blue Collar Consulting - WCB Specialist

Blue Collar Consulting - WCB Specialist Blue Collar is an Alberta-based firm that assists injured workers and employers with WCB appeals, disability management, and integrated OHS solutions.

What Should Be ObviousThere is a concept in law — and in basic human reasoning — that some conclusions should not requir...
05/30/2026

What Should Be Obvious

There is a concept in law — and in basic human reasoning — that some conclusions should not require a fight. When the facts are clear, when the circumstances are unambiguous, when any fair-minded person looking at the situation would arrive at the same place without much effort, we sometimes describe that outcome as prima facie. Self-evident. Axiomatic. A conclusion that flows naturally from the evidence without needing to be argued into existence.

I want to talk about what happens when the system loses sight of that.

We recently won an important appeal at the Appeals Commission on behalf of a client. I want to tell you about that win, what it means, and why it matters; not just for him, but for injured workers across this province.

The Worker

Our client is not a young man. He is approaching retirement age. He has spent his working life doing physical work — the kind of work that wears a body down over decades. He does not have a long list of office credentials. He does not have a background in sedentary, computer-based employment. His hands — his tools — have been seriously damaged.

In October 2017, he was injured at work. The Workers’ Compensation Board accepted his claim. Over the following years, his compensable conditions were assessed, expanded, and documented in detail. By early 2022, WCB had formally recognized that he had a permanent clinical impairment rating of 14.09% of the whole body — a significant number representing real, lasting, measurable damage. He was discharged from return-to-work services with significant permanent restrictions on lifting, carrying, pushing, pulling, coordination, and driving.

But beyond the compensable conditions, there was a broader picture. Our client walks with a cane or walker. He has developed arthritis in his hands. He has significant problems with his hips, knees, and back. He has cardiac issues that require him to avoid high-stress work. He experiences vertigo. He has a history of stomach cancer. And at the time of our appeal, his cancer had recurred. He was actively undergoing cancer treatment. He was, by any objective measure, very ill and very frail.

It was nonetheless decided that he was employable as WCB’s favourite, one-size-fits-all job lead: dispatching.

The Decision WCB Made

In October 2023, WCB determined that our client’s Economic Loss Payment — the ongoing wage-loss benefit he receives because he can no longer work — should be calculated based on what a dispatcher earns. Not based on what he was actually earning. Not based on any real job he had obtained. Based on the theory that he could earn dispatcher wages, so his benefits should be reduced accordingly....

Link to the full article in the comment section.

Most of you know me as someone who fights for injured workers. That hasn't changed and it never will.But I also work wit...
05/23/2026

Most of you know me as someone who fights for injured workers. That hasn't changed and it never will.

But I also work with employers. Good ones. The kind who genuinely care about their people, want to do right by someone who gets hurt on the job, and just need someone to point them in the right direction.

My latest piece in OHS Canada is written for those employers. It makes the case that the single most powerful thing a company can do when someone gets hurt isn't a policy document or a return-to-work protocol. It's a phone call. A real one, from someone who knows the worker, asking how they're doing — not pressuring them to return to work before they're ready.

If you've ever been injured and sat at home in the silence wondering whether anyone from work was going to call — you already know exactly what this article is about. You lived it.
Good employers exist. There are more of them than you might think. This article is for them.

Link in the comments.

Disability management involves a great deal of psychology. I’ll date myself here, but I grew up reading about Jack Welch...
05/03/2026

Disability management involves a great deal of psychology. I’ll date myself here, but I grew up reading about Jack Welch and General Motors, absorbing his philosophy that winning cultures are built on positivity, on genuine teamwork, on people who feel valued enough to bring their best. That idea stuck with me, and over the years I’ve parlayed it into something of a personal motto when it comes to disability management — and frankly, in most of my professional relationships. We’re always looking to build bridges. Always looking for a way forward. Because the alternative, in a landscape as emotionally charged and complicated as workplace injury, is watching relationships break down unnecessarily under the weight of systems and stress and silence. And that’s a loss nobody can afford, not the worker, not the employer, and not the culture they built together.

Here’s something I’ve observed over nearly a decade of sitting inside workers’ compensation files that doesn’t get talked about nearly enough. A serious workplace injury ranks among the most destabilizing events a human being can experience. I’m not being dramatic. We’re talking divorce territory. Death in the family territory. The kind of event that doesn’t just interrupt a life but reorganizes it completely. Career, identity, income, routine, physical capability, sense of self, all of it thrown into sudden and terrifying uncertainty.

And yet somehow, in the world of claims management and return-to-work planning, we talk about injured workers the way we talk about open files. There’s a person inside that file. A frightened one, more often than not.

What I’ve come to understand about that frightened person is this. In the immediate aftermath of a serious injury, while they’re sitting at home in pain and confusion trying to figure out what their life looks like now, they are quietly and perhaps unconsciously running a test. Not a formal test. Not a deliberate one. But a test nonetheless. They are asking themselves: do I matter to these people? Does this employer, with whom I may have spent years, actually value me as a human being, or was I always just a unit of production? The answer to that question, and the speed with which it arrives, shapes everything that follows.

I had an employer client come to me concerned about rising WCB premiums in the wake of a significant injury. Standard enough situation. But when I reviewed the redacted worker file, I was struck immediately by something. Even in the sanitized, bureaucratic language of WCB correspondence, this worker’s professionalism and composure were visible. He was dealing with an incredibly painful situation, physically, emotionally, practically, and yet his communications with the system were measured, articulate, and reasonable. I made a mental note.

I asked the employer directly: how much do you value this person? Because that question matters enormously to how I do my job. An employer’s legal obligation under Canadian human rights and workers’ compensation legislation extends to the point of undue hardship, that’s the floor, not the ceiling. But if a worker is genuinely valued, if they’re the kind of person a company quietly organizes itself around, then there’s often a case for going above and beyond the legal minimum. Creating a modified role that wouldn’t otherwise exist. Being more flexible with timelines. Investing more in the relationship.

The employer confirmed what I suspected. This was not a replaceable worker. This was someone with years of embedded knowledge, competence, and institutional memory. The kind of person whose departure leaves a hole that a job posting can’t fill.

And yet friction developed. Slowly at first, then irreversibly. Not because anyone was acting in bad faith. Not because the employer didn’t care. But because in the vacuum of the recovery period, those weeks and months when the worker is at home and the workplace carries on, nobody called. Nobody checked in. Nobody said the simple, human, costless thing: we’re thinking about you. You matter here. Take the time you need. In that silence, the worker drew his own conclusions. Positions hardened. And an employment relationship that had every reason to survive a difficult period didn’t survive it.

We managed the WCB costs successfully. On paper, the file closed well. But the employer said something to me at the end that I’ve thought about many times since. He said he regretted how it ended. That losing this particular person had done damage to the company that didn’t show up anywhere in the financial statements but was real nonetheless. He was right. And it never had to happen.

What I tell employers now, consistently, across every sector I work in, is that the single most underutilized tool in disability management costs nothing and takes fifteen minutes every two weeks. Call the worker. Not about the claim. Not about return-to-work timelines or modified duties or WCB forms. Just call. Ask how they’re doing. Tell them they’re missed. Let them know the door is open. I call these wellness checks, and I’ve seen them do more to preserve employment relationships through difficult claims than any formal accommodation plan ever could. Because what they communicate, what they prove in the moment that matters most, is that the answer to the worker’s quiet, unspoken question is yes. Yes, you matter here. Yes, we value you. Yes, this relationship is worth preserving.

The cost of that phone call is fifteen minutes of someone’s time. The cost of not making it can be an irreplaceable person walking out the door, taking years of knowledge and competence with them, and leaving behind a gap that no hire will ever quite fill. In my experience, that’s always the more expensive outcome. Always.

Tomorrow at 10:00 AM, the Government of Alberta’s Ministry of Jobs, Economy, Trade and Immigration, together with the Wo...
04/26/2026

Tomorrow at 10:00 AM, the Government of Alberta’s Ministry of Jobs, Economy, Trade and Immigration, together with the Workers’ Compensation Board, will host Honouring Lives Lost: Preparing for the Day of Mourning.

April 28 marks the National Day of Mourning, a time to honour and remember workers who were killed, injured, or became ill because of their work. This webinar will reflect on workplace fatalities, the impact on families and communities, and the steps workplaces can take to prevent future injuries, illnesses, and deaths.

Presenters will include the Workers’ Compensation Board, which will discuss its role following a workplace fatality, including decision-making, benefits, and services; the OHS Investigation Resolution Unit, which supports injured workers and next-of-kin in serious and fatal workplace incidents; Employment Standards, which will speak to the importance of breaks, rest days, and vacation; and OHS Prevention Services, which will review Alberta injury, illness, and fatality statistics and discuss prevention through OHS management systems.

Annette Smith, whose son Zachary Smith was fatally injured at work at age 18, will also share how workplace tragedy affects not only families, but entire communities.

A meaningful and important event for anyone committed to safer, fairer, and healthier workplaces.

To register, click here: 12dceede-ea63-45fa-bb50-9e411f2d7f57@2bb51c06-af9b-42c5-8bf5-3c3b7b10850b/registration" rel="ugc" target="_blank">https://events.teams.microsoft.com/event/12dceede-ea63-45fa-bb50-9e411f2d7f57@2bb51c06-af9b-42c5-8bf5-3c3b7b10850b/registration

Somewhere in the first conversation I have with a new injured worker client, I’ll often say something that can sound har...
04/25/2026

Somewhere in the first conversation I have with a new injured worker client, I’ll often say something that can sound harsh if it’s misunderstood.

I’ll say: we have to play the game.

And I know how that can sound. I’m not saying someone’s injury is a game. I’m not saying their surgery, lost wages, pain, stress, or sleepless nights are a game. Obviously not. What I mean is that WCB has the rules on paper, and then it has the rules you only really start to understand after you’ve spent enough time immersed in the system.

There’s the Act. There’s policy. There are forms, deadlines, medical reports, case managers, appeal rights, review bodies, decision letters, and the whole machinery of it. All of that matters. But knowing the rules isn’t the same as knowing the game.

A worker can know exactly what happened. Their spouse can know. Their body can know. Their doctor might even understand the situation pretty well. But if the file doesn’t say it properly, or if the evidence isn’t framed in a way the system can actually use, then the system often doesn’t really “know” it at all. That’s one of the hardest things for injured workers to wrap their heads around.

It’s not always about being right in the ordinary human sense. It’s about proving the right thing, in the right way, at the right time, using the language the system is built to recognize. And that’s where advocacy lives.

This isn’t me attacking WCB staff personally. Most of the people I deal with are sincere and conscientious, and a lot of them are doing difficult work inside a very large system with very real constraints. But the system itself has pressures. It has processes. It has habits. It has blind spots. And injured workers can get caught in the middle of all of that.

So when I say we have to play the game, I’m not being cynical. I’m being honest. Anger might be justified, and often is, but anger by itself isn’t a strategy. The goal isn’t to be loud. The goal is to be effective.

Because injured workers don’t need symbolic victories. They need real ones.

Link to the full article in the comment section.

🚨 Important message for Alberta workers — especially if you're in your 50s or on WCB benefitsI get calls every week from...
04/03/2026

🚨 Important message for Alberta workers — especially if you're in your 50s or on WCB benefits

I get calls every week from people who are absolutely blindsided. They're almost 65, they've been on WCB, and they just found out their benefits are about to be cut significantly. Most of the time, by the time they call, they're in panic mode.

I don't want that to happen to you or anyone you care about.

Here's the short version of what you need to know:

✅ WCB benefits get reduced at age 65. You get a letter about 6 months before it happens. That's not enough time.

✅ The only real protection is pre-injury proof. WCB can extend benefits past 65, but only if they can see evidence — created before you were ever hurt — that you planned to keep working past the normal retirement age.

✅ What counts as proof NOW:

→ A letter from your employer saying you planned to keep working past 65

→ A financial plan from an adviser (prepared before the injury) showing you weren't retiring at 65

A mortgage used to be enough. It's not anymore. WCB has cracked down hard.

✅ The honest truth: Most Canadians don't have the savings to retire at 65 — and that's especially true for people who've spent time on reduced WCB income. If you know you'll need to keep working, document that intention now. Talk to your boss. See a financial adviser. Get it on paper.

Once you're injured, it's too late. WCB only looks at what existed before.

This is like a will or life insurance — you do it while everything is fine, so you're protected if it's not.

📲 Share this with anyone you know who works in a physical job, trades, construction, care work, driving — anyone who could realistically end up on WCB one day.

Questions? Drop them in the comments or message me directly.

If your WCB Alberta case manager is ghosting you — you’re not imagining it, and you’re not powerless.Silence stalls clai...
01/19/2026

If your WCB Alberta case manager is ghosting you — you’re not imagining it, and you’re not powerless.

Silence stalls claims: wage-loss, medical approvals, RTW planning… and meanwhile deadlines can keep running.

Here’s the simple playbook that actually works:

1) Stop “checking in.” Send an ACTION email.
Ask for (a) a decision or (b) what’s outstanding + timeline — by a specific date (5 business days).

Subject: Action Required – Claim # – Request for Decision/Update re: [issue]
“Please confirm by [date] either your decision, or what information is outstanding, who is responsible, and expected timeline.”

2) If no reply, follow up once — then change channels.
Reply to the same thread: “Following up as the requested response date has passed.”

Then call the general line and ask:

- Is this case worker still assigned?

- Who’s covering?

- Do the file notes reflect my contact attempts?

3) Start a contact log.
Dates, times, method, what you asked for, what happened. Boring = powerful evidence later.

4) Escalate cleanly (facts only).
Dates + issue + why it’s time-sensitive. No ranting. No threats. Reach out to a supervisor or manager via the Contact Centre and request a FORMAL CALLBACK.

5) Protect your deadlines.
If there’s a decision letter involved, don’t assume silence pauses anything. Preserve timelines “out of an abundance of caution.”

For the full version, please visit Blue Collar's website.

12/24/2025

As 2025 comes to a close, we want to recognize the people at the centre of this work: workers, families, and employers trying to do the right thing in a complex system.

This year, Blue Collar Consulting had many significant wins at the Appeals Commission of Alberta, resulting in millions of dollars in benefits secured and restored for injured workers. Those outcomes aren’t “paper victories.” They translate into stability: mortgages paid, treatment accessed, and families getting breathing room again.

We’re also grateful for our employer clients, the ones who take disability management seriously, invest in early support, and build return-to-work programs that are practical and humane. When disability management is done properly, workers do better—and employers often see the downstream benefits too: fewer claim complications, better recovery trajectories, and more sustainable WCB costs/premiums over time.

Whether we’re advocating for injured workers or helping employers strengthen disability management, the goal is the same: better outcomes, less friction, and a fair process that holds up when tested.

Wishing our clients, partners, and community a calm holiday season and a strong start to 2026.

What really happens to your WCB Economic Loss Payment (ELP) when you turn 65?Most injured workers assume their wage-loss...
11/24/2025

What really happens to your WCB Economic Loss Payment (ELP) when you turn 65?

Most injured workers assume their wage-loss benefits continue if they’re still disabled. The truth is far different — and far harsher.

The ELP cutoff at 65 is automatic. It’s abrupt. And unless you understand the rules (and the very narrow exception), you could be facing a major drop in income overnight.

I break down exactly what happens, why the system works this way, and what evidence workers need if they hope to extend benefits past 65.

This is essential reading for anyone over 55 with an active WCB claim.

👉 Read the full article here: https://bluecollarconsulting.ca/what-happens-to-your-elp-when-you-turn-65-a-complete-guide-for-injured-workers/

Injured Workers are Being Quietly Pressured to Disguise their Age, their Disability, and their Truth.In the Workers’ Com...
10/20/2025

Injured Workers are Being Quietly Pressured to Disguise their Age, their Disability, and their Truth.

In the Workers’ Compensation world, “return to work” has become the ultimate benchmark of success. Entire departments exist to promote it, countless programs are designed to support it, and legions of case managers are tasked with pushing it forward. On paper, it’s noble. The goal is to help injured workers re-enter the workforce, regain purpose, and rebuild financial independence. But somewhere along the way, the idea became corrupted. What was once about restoring dignity has evolved into a system of borderline manipulation and concealment.

WCB’s Quiet Gospel: Hide Who You Are

Across Canada, injured workers are told by WCB that they are under no legal obligation to disclose a disability to a prospective employer. And technically, that’s true. Under human rights law, a worker cannot be compelled to disclose a disability unless it directly affects their ability to perform the essential duties of the job. Employers are expected to evaluate candidates based on merit, not medical status. That’s how it’s supposed to work in theory.

But WCB doesn’t stop there. They advise workers to leave employment dates off their résumés so that prospective employers won’t know how long they’ve been off work. They suggest avoiding mention of any medical restrictions, gaps, or accommodations that might signal vulnerability. The advice, stripped of its polished phrasing, is simple: pretend nothing happened.

This is what passes for vocational guidance in Canada’s compensation system. But the problem is that real life doesn’t work this way. Employers aren’t blind. They notice gaps. They ask questions. They pick up on physical limitations or fatigue in an interview. And when the truth inevitably surfaces, it’s not the Board that pays the price. It’s the worker who is left to carry the burden of having been “less than transparent.”

The Collision Between Legal Rights and Human Reality

Human rights law may provide theoretical protection, but it can’t shield workers from the harsh realities of the job market. The law says that discrimination on the basis of disability, age, or time away from work is illegal. But the labor market says something else entirely.

Employers, overwhelmed with hundreds of applicants for a single posting, skim résumés in seconds. They look for recent experience, uninterrupted work history, and evidence of adaptability. A ten-year gap signals instability. A sixty-year-old applicant with a physical limitation is seen as a liability. The law may tell employers not to think that way, but laws can’t regulate subconscious bias.

WCB knows this. That’s why they promote concealment. They understand that in an economy where employers can choose from a hundred “perfect” candidates, an injured or aging worker will rarely get a fair shake. So they encourage workers to camouflage the truth. It’s not empowerment. It’s desperation disguised as strategy. And the cruel irony is that even if concealment lands a job, it’s usually a short-lived victory.

The Fallout of Concealment

Imagine a 52-year-old tradesman who injured his back on the job. After months of physiotherapy and retraining funded by WCB, he’s ready to return to work, this time in a clerical or light-duty role. His vocational specialist tells him to remove employment dates, downplay the physical nature of his past work, and avoid mentioning the injury altogether.

Read the rest here: https://bluecollarconsulting.ca/the-cult-of-concealment-how-wcbs-job-search-advice-undermines-trust-dignity-and-reality/

Address

541 Eagleson Wynd NW
Edmonton, AB
T6M0Y4

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Wednesday 8am - 5pm
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Telephone

+17803405727

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