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Locality: Kingston, Ontario

Phone: +1 613-549-6941



Address: 30 Steve Fonyo Drive Unit 200-1 K7M 8N9 Kingston, ON, Canada

Website: www.safetyguystraining.com

Likes: 345

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Safety Guys Workplace Safety Trainers 07.11.2020

Construction is where art and science meet,...this is one of the best descriptions I have heard for work in construction. Very fulfilling careers in the trades are available, imagine a different future for yourself then go out and start building towards that. And if you need training along the way, give us a call, we're here to help!

Safety Guys Workplace Safety Trainers 25.10.2020

Kingston people are the best!

Safety Guys Workplace Safety Trainers 21.10.2020

This is a new initiative that allows businesses to easily announce that they take COVID seriously and are taking every precaution to protect their clients. While we have taking precautions all along we are proud to take the new Post Promise. Simple is good!

Safety Guys Workplace Safety Trainers 17.10.2020

Recognize the experiences of over 150,000 Indigenous children who suffered great harm at residential schools in Canada by raising awareness on Orange Shirt Day,... today. Residential schools were established with the purpose of assimilating Indigenous peoples into mainstream Canadian society by attempting to erase their cultures and force them into Christianity and speaking English or French. Students were discouraged from speaking their first language or practicing native traditions. If they were caught, they would experience severe punishment. Throughout the years, students lived in substandard conditions and endured physical and emotional abuse. One in twenty-five Indigenous children died while attending residential schools. There have also been convictions of sexual abuse. Students at residential schools rarely had opportunities to see examples of normal family life. Most were in school 10 months a year, away from their parents; some stayed all year round. All correspondence from the children was written in English, which many parents couldn't read. Brothers and sisters at the same school rarely saw each other, as all activities were segregated by gender. Some schools carried out nutritional experiments on malnourished students in the 1940s and '50s with the federal government's knowledge. When children returned to the reserve, they often found they didn't have the skills to help their parents, and became ashamed of their native heritage. The skills taught at the schools were generally substandard; many found it hard to function in an urban setting. The aims of assimilation meant devastation for those who were subjected to years of abuse.

Safety Guys Workplace Safety Trainers 27.09.2020

Couldn't be a nicer day to conduct training outside. Thrilled to be helping out the good people at Topsy Farms with some chainsaw safety training.