Province-by-Province Guide to Skid Steer Regulations in Canada
OH&S requirements, operator training standards, and equipment regulations vary by province. This guide covers what's required — and what's expected — for commercial skid steer operations across Canada.
Important note: Regulations change. This guide reflects the regulatory framework as of early 2026, but specific requirements — particularly training standards and equipment specifications — are periodically updated. Always verify current requirements directly with your provincial OH&S authority before commencing commercial operations. Links to each provincial regulator are included below.
Skid steer regulation in Canada is primarily a provincial matter — there's no single federal standard governing how skid steers and their attachments must be operated on construction sites or in industrial settings. The result is a patchwork of provincial OH&S regulations that share common principles but differ in specifics around operator training requirements, equipment inspection standards, and attachment-specific rules.
What's consistent across provinces: the general duty clause, which requires employers to provide safe equipment, trained operators, and safe work procedures. Every province's OH&S legislation includes this in some form. The differences are in how that duty is operationalized — through mandated training programs, specific inspection requirements, and sector-specific regulations.
The Federal Layer: Where It Applies
Federal OH&S legislation (Canada Labour Code, Part II, and the Canada Occupational Health and Safety Regulations) applies to federally-regulated workplaces — federal government operations, interprovincial transportation, banking, broadcasting, and similar sectors. Most construction, agriculture, landscaping, and resource industry work is provincially regulated.
The exception: Indigenous-owned businesses operating on reserve land may fall under federal jurisdiction for OH&S purposes, depending on the nature of the work. If you're uncertain which jurisdiction applies to your workplace, the Canadian Centre for Occupational Health and Safety (CCOHS) provides guidance.
Alberta
Alberta
Operator Training Requirements
Alberta OHS does not mandate a specific provincial certification for skid steer operators, but the Occupational Health and Safety Act requires that operators be competent — defined as adequately qualified, suitably trained, and with sufficient experience to safely perform the work. In practice, this means employers must demonstrate that their operators have received appropriate training. This is typically documented through:
- Manufacturer-provided training or operator manual review
- Industry training from organizations like the Alberta Construction Safety Association (ACSA)
- Equipment-specific training for specialty attachments (mulchers, breakers, etc.)
On regulated construction projects (projects requiring a safety plan), the Safety Codes Act requirements around equipment operation apply. Large general contractors typically require operators to hold documented training — often NCSO (National Construction Safety Officer) level oversight and documented site-specific orientation.
Equipment Inspection Requirements
The Alberta OHS Code (Part 16 — Power Mobile Equipment) requires pre-operational inspections of mobile equipment including skid steers. Operators must inspect for defects before each shift. Inspection records are required to be maintained. Defects that affect safe operation must be repaired before the equipment is used. There's no mandated government inspection schedule — but employer documentation of inspections is expected during worksite inspections.
Attachment-Specific Requirements
Hydraulic breaker use on construction sites falls under Part 16 requirements around impact equipment. Operators must be trained in the specific hazards of the attachment being used — not just the base machine. Using an auger near buried utilities requires compliance with the Occupational Health and Safety Code Part 33 (concrete, masonry and similar work) regarding digging near utilities — and requires Alberta One Call (now Utility Safety Partners) notification before digging.
Young Worker Note
Workers under 18 in Alberta have restrictions on operating power mobile equipment in some contexts. Verify age-related restrictions if employing young workers on skid steer operations.
British Columbia
British Columbia
Operator Training Requirements
WorkSafeBC takes a more prescriptive approach than most provinces. The BC OHS Regulation (Part 16 — Mobile Equipment) requires that operators of mobile equipment be trained and evaluated by a qualified person — which typically means formal equipment-specific training, not just reading the manual. WorkSafeBC's published guidance recommends operators be trained in:
- Pre-operational inspection procedures
- Safe operating procedures specific to the attachment in use
- Load capacity and stability principles
- Hazard recognition for the site type
BC's forestry sector — where skid steers and CTLs are widely used for site prep, slash mulching, and reforestation — has additional requirements under the Forest Safety Council framework. Operations under a Forest Stewardship Plan may require operator certification recognized by the BC Forest Safety Council.
Attachment-Specific Requirements
Mulcher operations in BC are subject to WorkSafeBC's requirements around thrown-object hazards. A minimum exclusion zone must be maintained around operating mulchers — the specific distance depends on the mulcher type and operating conditions, but WorkSafeBC's Mobile Equipment regulation requires that no person be within the zone of potential ejected material. For drum mulchers operating in slash, this is typically a 15–30 metre exclusion radius.
Auger work near buried utilities: BC 1 Call notification is mandatory before any excavation. WorkSafeBC enforces this as a site safety requirement independent of BC 1 Call's own legal requirement.
Hydraulic Breaker Note
Using a hydraulic breaker in BC requires awareness of silica exposure regulations under OHS Reg Part 5 — if breaking concrete or masonry near workers, silica dust controls (wet cutting, respiratory protection) may apply even with a skid steer breaker.
Ontario
Ontario
Operator Training Requirements
Ontario's Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHSA) and the Construction Projects Regulation (O. Reg. 213/91) are the primary frameworks. For construction projects, the Construction Projects Regulation requires that skid steer operators on regulated construction projects have received training from a competent person in the safe operation of the specific equipment being used.
Ontario does not require a formal provincial certificate for general skid steer operation, but the Infrastructure Health & Safety Association (IHSA) provides widely-accepted skid steer operator training that is recognized by most construction general contractors as meeting the "competent person" training standard. Many major Ontario GCs require IHSA-format documentation for equipment operators on their sites.
The MOL's construction regulations (O. Reg. 213/91, Section 93) specifically address powered mobile equipment training requirements — operators must be trained in the safe operation of the machine and any attachment in use.
Equipment Inspection
Daily pre-shift inspections are required. O. Reg. 213/91 requires mobile equipment to be maintained in safe operating condition and inspected before use. Ontario worksite inspectors are active on construction sites — inadequate inspection documentation is a common citation.
Specific Requirements Worth Noting
Ontario's Occupational Health and Safety Act specifically addresses working near overhead power lines — minimum clearance distances from live overhead wires apply to the skid steer boom and any attachment. The minimum clearance under OHSA for lines less than 750 volts is 3 metres; for higher voltage lines, it increases. Snow blowing or working near overhead utilities with a skid steer requires operator awareness of these clearances.
Quebec
Quebec
Operator Training Requirements
Quebec's Act Respecting Occupational Health and Safety (LSST) and the Safety Code for the Construction Industry (Code de sécurité pour les travaux de construction) govern construction operations. The Construction Industry Commission (CCQ) regulates who can perform construction work — in Quebec, construction work is generally restricted to workers holding a CCQ competency certificate in the applicable trade.
For skid steer operators on regulated construction sites in Quebec, this means operators typically need CCQ registration. The applicable trade classification for heavy equipment operators in Quebec is Operateur de machinerie lourde (heavy equipment operator). This is a more formalized requirement than most other provinces.
Outside of regulated construction (agricultural, private property, municipal maintenance), the CCQ requirement doesn't apply, but CNESST's general OH&S requirements still govern training and competency.
Language Note
All workplace safety documentation, training materials, and signage in Quebec must be in French per the Charter of the French Language. Equipment manuals used in Quebec workplaces should be in French — most major OEMs (Bobcat, Cat, John Deere) provide French-Canadian versions of their operator manuals on request or for download.
Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan
Operator Training Requirements
Saskatchewan's Occupational Health and Safety Regulations, 2020 require employers to ensure workers are trained in the safe operation of all equipment they use. The Saskatchewan Construction Safety Association (SaskSafety) and Construction Safety Association of Saskatchewan provide recognized training. No provincial certification is mandated, but documented training is expected on regulated work sites.
Agricultural Context
Saskatchewan has a large agricultural sector where skid steers are widely used on farms. Agriculture falls under different OH&S frameworks in Saskatchewan — the Agricultural Employer Exemption historically meant family farm operations were less regulated than commercial contractors, though this has been evolving. Commercial agricultural operations (those with employees) are generally subject to the same OH&S requirements as other industries.
Manitoba
Manitoba
Operator Training Requirements
Manitoba's Workplace Safety and Health Act and its attendant regulations require operator training for mobile equipment. The Manitoba Construction Sector Council and the Workplace Safety and Health Division provide guidance on training standards. Manitoba's construction regulations under Part 14 (Mobile Equipment) parallel Alberta's requirements — daily inspections, competent operators, and written safe work procedures for higher-risk operations.
Atlantic Provinces (New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, PEI, Newfoundland)
Atlantic Canada Overview
The Atlantic provinces follow a similar framework: OH&S legislation requires operator training and daily inspections, but specific certification requirements for skid steer operators are minimal compared to Quebec or BC's forestry sector. WorkSafe NB, Nova Scotia's Labour Standards and Safety division, PEI's Workers Compensation Board, and WorkplaceNL all operate under this general-duty framework.
Nova Scotia's regulations are somewhat more prescriptive around construction site equipment — the Occupational Safety General Regulations require equipment inspection records to be maintained on-site and available for inspection. New Brunswick's General Regulation 91-191 under the OH&S Act similarly requires daily pre-operational inspection records.
Common Requirements Across All Provinces
| Requirement | Details | Who Enforces |
|---|---|---|
| Daily pre-operational inspection | Operator checks machine and attachment before each shift; defects must be repaired | Provincial OH&S inspectors |
| Operator training documentation | Training records for all operators; training specific to attachment in use | Provincial OH&S inspectors |
| Utility locate before digging | Provincial utility locate service notification required before any ground penetration | Both utility locate authority and OH&S |
| Exclusion zones for hazardous attachments | Mulchers, breakers, and other thrown-object risk attachments require exclusion zones | Provincial OH&S inspectors |
| Safe Work Procedures (SWP) | Written SWPs required for higher-risk operations on most regulated sites | Provincial OH&S inspectors |
| ROPS (Rollover Protective Structure) | Required on all skid steers; not attachment-specific but a machine requirement | Factory-installed; OEM compliance |
Dig Before You Dig: Utility Locate Requirements by Province
Every Canadian province has a utility locate system — the service you call before digging or driving any ground-penetrating attachment (auger, trencher, etc.). These are legal requirements, not suggestions.
- Alberta: Utility Safety Partners (formerly Alberta One Call) — 1-800-242-3447
- BC: BC 1 Call — 1-800-474-6886
- Manitoba/Saskatchewan: Click Before You Dig / Manitoba 1 Call / SaskAlert (Saskatchewan Underground Infrastructure Notification)
- Ontario: Ontario One Call — 1-800-400-2255
- Quebec: Info-Excavation — 1-800-663-9228
- Atlantic provinces: Nova Scotia, NB, PEI, NL each have separate locate services; contact your provincial utility authority
Required notice period before digging: typically 3 business days minimum in most provinces. Some excavations require longer notice. Emergency excavations have different procedures — but scheduled commercial auger, trenching, and post-hole work has no exemption from the notice requirement.
Insurance implications: Hitting a buried utility without a valid locate can void your equipment insurance coverage for the resulting damage, in addition to the civil and regulatory liability for the utility disruption. This is not a formality — it's a genuine risk management requirement.
A Note on Attachment-Specific Safety Standards
No province has enacted attachment-specific regulations that prescribe which attachments are permitted in which configurations — provincial OH&S regulations address machine operation generally, not attachment-specific use cases. But attachment manufacturers must comply with Canadian standards for guarding, labelling, and safety features:
- CSA Standard B335 (Safety Standard for Lift Trucks) provides some guidance applicable to attachments in industrial contexts
- Attachments sold in Canada should comply with applicable SAE International standards for the attachment category (SAE J1197 for skid steer loaders, for example)
- ANSI/ITSDF standards for industrial trucks and attachments are referenced in some Canadian regulatory contexts
In practice: the regulatory focus for attachments is on the employer's obligation to ensure safe use, not on mandated attachment-specific certifications. An employer running a mulcher must ensure it's used with proper exclusion zones and by a trained operator — but there's no provincial "mulcher operator certificate" required.