Trip Leaders: Transport Canada RegulationsIf you are guiding or leading on a river (including teaching a course, guiding, or acting as a leader in a paid or volunteer capacity Transport Canada requires you to carry a first aid kit including: - an up-to-date first aid manual or up-to-date first aid instructions, in English and French,
- 48 doses of analgesic medication of a non-narcotic type,
- six safety pins or one roll of adhesive first aid tape,
- one pair of bandage scissors or safety scissors,
- one resuscitation face shield,
- two pairs of examination gloves,
- 10 applications of antiseptic preparations,
- 12 applications of burn preparations,
- adhesive plasters in assorted sizes,
- 10 sterile compression bandages in assorted sizes,
- 4 m of elastic bandage,
- two sterile gauze compresses,
- two triangular bandages, and
- a waterproof list of the contents, in English and French
From Transport Canada Section 8.1. In addition every person must have a PFD, a 15 m throw bag, a manual bailer or bilge pump, a whistle, a flashlight after dark, and a helmet for whitewater over Class 2. In addition it is the responsiblity of the trip leader to ensure everything is tied down and secured in boats. "If the water temperature is less than 15ºC, a person responsible for an enterprise that conducts guided excursions and the leader of a guided excursion shall ensure that equipment is immediately available or that procedures are established to protect the participants from the effects of hypothermia or cold shock resulting from swamping, capsizing or falling overboard. A person responsible for an enterprise that conducts guided excursions and the leader of a guided excursion shall, before the beginning of the excursion, ensure that all participants are briefed in either or both official languages, according to their needs, on the safety and emergency procedures relevant to the guided excursion. The leader of a guided excursion shall, before the beginning of the excursion, report the number of participants in the excursion to a person on shore who has been designated by the leader to be responsible for communicating with search and rescue authorities in case of an emergency. If the guided excursion takes place in a remote area and it is not possible to report the number of participants to a person on shore, the leader of the excursion shall leave a record of the number of participants and the area of operation in a known location on shore that is accessible to search and rescue authorities." From Transport Canada Section 303 to 305. |