The new division consolidates PSHSA's digital products and will expand to include risk assessments and ergonomic tools
Ontario's workplace safety regulator is embedding artificial intelligence directly into its compliance and training infrastructure.
The Public Services Health & Safety Association (PSHSA) launched Intelligent Safety on Thursday, establishing what it describes as Ontario's first dedicated AI division for public sector workplace health, safety, and wellbeing.
The division consolidates PSHSA's existing digital tools, including Occupational Stress Injury Resiliency (OSIR), Radius, and Compliance First, under a single brand.
PSHSA said the division is structured around a "Human-to-Technology" model, with AI systems handling administrative, routine, and data-intensive tasks so practitioners and frontline teams can focus on higher-order work.
The tools are designed to support compliance management, workplace risk identification, and employee wellbeing assessments.
"By establishing Intelligent Safety as a formal division, we are embedding AI into our organization in a way that is accountable, transparent, and firmly grounded in health and safety expertise," CEO and COO Glenn Cullen said.
The first product under the banner is All Day TA, an AI teaching assistant integrated into PSHSA's Health & Safety for Leaders course, designed to support learners and facilitators during and after training sessions.
PSHSA said it plans to expand the portfolio in the coming months with AI-powered risk assessments, a job accommodation tool, digital ergonomic assessments, and additional All Day TA-enhanced training courses.


