LaborNET Offices_for_Lease
Search   
Home | Ask Neale | Calendar | Links 

  LaborNET Sites

Workers Online
ACTU
NZCTU
Unions NSW
VIC Trades Hall Council
Vic Union Health & Safety Network
Unions WA
UNIONSAFE
Union Teach
Bosswatch
Unions on LaborNET
Evatt Foundation
South Coast Labor Council


  

Union Positions
Communications and Media Officer (4 days a week)
Area Organiser (6 month position with view to permanent)
National Industry Coordinator
MEMBERSHIP OFFICER
Submit a Job

UNIONSAFE
Latest News
Safety Helpdesk
Shoptalk
Youthsafe

Union Teach
Lesson Plans
Resources
Factsheets
Glossary
Feedback
Links

IR Resources
IR Commissions
IR Departments
Legal Resources

LaborNET Calendar

APHEDA: Union Aid Abroad
Latest News
Current Campaigns

Websites for Unions
Organising Online
Publish your own content

Chifley Financial Services
Home Loans
Financial Planning
Insurance

Union Shopper

 

Workers grieve for lost lives

Date: 27 April 2009

Families of victims of workplace deaths will join with unions at rallies and memorial services tomorrow (Tuesday 28 April) to mark lives lost in workplace accidents.

ACTU President Sharan Burrow said this year's International Workers' Memorial Day events will highlight the poor level of health and safety and discrimination faced by construction workers as a result of the Howard Government-created Australian Building and Construction Commission (ABCC).



Ms Burrow, who will speak at a Brisbane rally said: "The ABCC powers are coercive, designed to intimidate building workers and provide fewer rights for those working in the construction industry. They must be abolished."

She said the rising human and economic cost of workplace death should send a strong signal to State and Territory governments that health and safety standards should not be watered down.

Over the past year in Queensland alone, 20 construction workers have lost their lives.

In 2004-5, prior to the introduction of the ABCC and special laws which discriminate against building workers, 19 workers died on construction sites nationally, but in 2005-6, the figure jumped to 29 and rose again in 2007 to 33 deaths.

"The lack of action to reduce workplace deaths and improve health and safety on construction sites is further evidence of the need to disband the ABCC and abolish discriminatory laws for the industry.

"When lives are at stake, we need to be improving health and safety standards, not cutting corners or victimising workers who speak out about health and safety," said Ms Burrow.

A new report from the Australian Safety and Compensation Council conservatively estimates there are 7,000 work-related deaths each year -- more than four times the Australian road toll .

"Unions support the development of new harmonised national workplace health and safety laws but it is essential the new laws deliver the highest standards and that the rights of every Australian worker are strengthened and not diminished," said Ms Burrow.

"Workplace safety representatives are fundamental to protecting health and safety and unions will vigorously oppose any watering down of their rights and consultation arrangements.

"It is also vital that the new laws allow unions to initiate prosecutions over breaches of workplace safety where other agencies have failed to do so and that the onus is on employers to prove they have provided a safe and healthy workplace.

For further information

Contact: Amanda Tattam
Union: ACTU
Contact Mobile: 0418 479 455
WWW: http://www.actu.asn.au/


Live News Feed
Current Stories | Yearly Archive | Organisation Indexes | Topic Index
Privacy | Disclaimer | Sitemap |Feedback | Links  
© 1997-2002 LaborNET is a resource for the labour movement
provided by the Labor Council of NSW
10th Floor, 377-383 Sussex Street, Sydney NSW 2000
Ph: (02) 9264 1691 Fax: (02) 9261 3505

http://www.labor.net.au/news/1240810868_31648.html
Last Modified: Monday, 27-Apr-2009 15:44:40 EST

LaborNET is proudly created, designed and programmed
by Social Change Online for the Labor Council of NSW
[Credits] [Site Matters]

Workers OnlineLabor Council of NSWLaborNET
Powered by APT Solutions