Parliament spaces out microphones after another interpreter is injured

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The federal government is being forced to adjust the setup in the House of Commons and committee rooms after another language interpreter suffered a significant hearing injury.

Union blames inadequate equipment on Parliament Hill for injuries

The Canadian Press

· Posted: Apr 29, 2024 1:05 PM EDT | Last Updated: 24 minutes ago

A language interpreter is seen working in an interpretation booth during a news conference in Ottawa on Friday, Oct. 16, 2020.

A language interpreter works in an interpretation booth during a news conference in Ottawa on Friday, Oct. 16, 2020. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

The federal government is being forced to adjust the setup in the House of Commons and committee rooms after another language interpreter suffered a significant hearing injury.

The Canadian Association of Professional Employees says the injured employee has been off work for weeks. It says it blames both this incident and other injuries on inadequate equipment on Parliament Hill.

The latest incident involved the Larsen effect, which occurs when a microphone and an earpiece get too close, resulting in a sharp, sudden feedback that can be loud or frequent enough to permanently injure someone.

A federal regulator last week ordered changes to how meeting spaces are set up to prevent it from happening again.

House of Commons Speaker Greg Fergus notified MPs this morning that tables in committee rooms were being rearranged to keep microphones and earpieces farther apart.

Last year, a regulator found Ottawa was breaking labour laws by not adequately protecting interpreters, following an October 2022 incident where a parliamentary interpreter was sent to the hospital in an ambulance after experiencing acoustic shock during a Senate committee meeting.

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