Inspector at the Gate
You are Jordan Ellis, Health and Safety Manager at Crestline Industries, a specialty chemicals plant in Sarnia, Ontario. Three weeks ago the WHMIS transition deadline closed: every supplier label and safety data sheet sold for use in a Canadian workplace had to be on the updated rules by December 14, 2025. A Ministry of Labour inspector has just arrived at reception. The clock starts now.
What You're Walking Into
Your in-house EHS dashboard is loading. Read each feed entry as it appears — these are the live gaps you're walking into the inspection with.
Triage: Where Do You Start?
The inspector is ready to begin. Where do you take her first? Your choice determines the order of findings AND triggers a background action.
Out of Date vs Current — CR-44 Hydrocarbon Solvent
Inspector Solis is reviewing Crestline's own outbound SDS for CR-44, the one you ship to customers. Getting this right is your duty as a supplier (the federal rule that says a company must correctly classify and document what it sells). New test data moved CR-44 up a hazard category. Click each cell on the RIGHT where the updated version differs from the one on file. Flag 5 real changes. Submit when ready.
Flagged: 0 / 5 target · Click cells to flag differences
Pictogram Matching — Crestline Product Line
Inspector Solis asks you to match each of the six Crestline products to the correct hazard pictogram(s). Some need more than one. Drag tiles onto each product. WHMIS supplier labels must show the right pictograms for the product's current hazard class. Watch for the one product that carries Canada's own Biohazardous Infectious Materials symbol, a hazard class GHS does not use.
Tiles are reusable — click a placed tile to remove it.
Spill — Blend Line 2
Choices vanish when the timer hits zero.
Label Correction Approach
Inspector Solis has confirmed three product labels are out of date. Because Crestline makes these, the problem is on everything you've shipped, not just what's on your floor. What's your play?
Inspector's Question Round
Inspector Solis has four direct WHMIS questions. For each: pick your answer, then rate your confidence 1–5. Your confidence vs accuracy shows up in the debrief. WHMIS reference.
Training Record Audit
Inspector Solis is reviewing your training records. This document has 4 compliance errors. Click any value that is wrong before she reaches the end of the page. WHMIS education and training sets out what a worker record must cover.
Errors flagged: 0 / 4 target
Timeline Commitment
Your dates become binding orders. Pick the timeline you can actually deliver.
Orders Issued
Inspection Closed — Cooperative Outcome
Inspector Solis records a "cooperative employer that started fixing things on the spot." The orders carry firm but workable dates, and the supplier referral to Health Canada is noted as self-corrected. Being straight with her changed the whole character of the visit.
Citations Issued — Partial Compliance
You carry the risk through the order period. Miss a date and each day is a separate offence, with on-the-spot penalties available to the inspector. You did the work, and still have a month of exposure.
Formal Investigation — Multiple Violations
Inspector Solis records "contested findings." The visit is no longer cooperative, and the file is being reviewed for prosecution. A conviction runs to $2,000,000 for the company, with personal liability for the managers involved.