|

OHS Chat & Skinner: 'Bygone
days'.
Dear Folks
My work is done. My job
is redundant. Well that is if you believe the recent ‘advertisement’ which DoL
actually decided was worthy of airtime. I heard it over the airwaves in Gauteng
and assumed it was aired nationwide. It went something like this……’Gone are
the days of unsafe working practices, gone are the days of unsafe working
places, gone are the days of this and that…’ Naturally we have DoL to thank
for the disappearance of unsafe working places and I recommend all SHE personnel
immediately look for new jobs! Apparently you had nothing to do with helping to
provide safe working places. Should we allow them to get away with this
propaganda? I’m not going to waste my time since it was in any case a dreadful
‘advertisement’ and, naturally, us poor taxpayers footed the bill.
Of real importance is the
decision in the High Court endorsing an agreement between the Compensation
Commissioner (WCC) and the Legal Resources Centre. (You will recall that the
Legal Resources took the Compensation Commissioner to court because of their
lethargy in processing claims). In terms of this agreement the
focus of the WCC finally moved from the employer to those employees killed or
injured in the course of work. ‘It also noted that the WCC agreed to deal
with all outstanding claims. This agreement, and the court ruling that gives
effect to it, eases a log jam of a decade and more created by bureaucratic
bungling, maladministration and sheer inertia. Whether it will finally provide
relief to the pent-up flood of human misery represented by the dusty files in
the WCC is moot. But it has finally exposed one of the great travesties of the
local labour market. Workers, by government edict,
gave up their right to sue employers for occupational injury, illness or
death, once the WCC was put in place. Workers injured as a result of their work
or the families of workers killed as a result of their occupation, were to be
automatically compensated. In the event, how compensation for various injuries
is calculated is often farcical, but the intention to adequately compensate
exists. Yet compensation commissioners have, over the years, decreed that only
employers could file claims to be acted on; without an employer report, a claim
could not be processed. This week, the high court in
Pretoria endorsed the rejection of that concept.
After a long and often frustrating battle by the LRC, it was at last agreed that
an employer report should not be a prerequisite for action. This amounts to a
potentially major breakthrough’.
Click here
for the full text of the article by Terry Bell. Another development in the
compensation arena is that the COID Act is going to be extended to include
domestic employees.
Other news is
that Mrs Stott finally received a settlement after her court battle with the
Johannesburg Country club after her husband was killed by lightning. The case
revolved around indemnities and the Supreme Court of Appeal indicated that it
was displeased with various types of indemnities particularly those which
deprive persons of suing when others were negligent. Watch this space.
Subscribers can down load the case by
clicking here. I predict many more challenges
to indemnities and that eventually the Constitutional Court will make a ruling.
I will cover the Stott case in detail at my forthcoming workshops.
Click here
for articles on the Stott case.
Gold Reef City
has been given a rough time by Carteblanche about the safety of their equipment.
I recall years ago that one of their top managers was actually arrested and
handcuffed for an OHS contravention. Those were the days when specialist
prosecutors took no prisoners and DoL actually functioned! Or should I say that
was before DoL waived its magic wand and unsafe working place disappeared.
Click here
for Carteblanche’s transcript of the events.
As many of you
know our offices were burgled and we lost some computer equipment. Yes I did do
backups but you know what it’s like. Most distressing is the fact that I lost
most of my Newsletter Distribution List as well as my Fax Data Base. Bottom line
is that many of you will not be receiving this Newsletter until we get back on
track and others will receive numerous irritating fax reminders about workshops.
Please bear with me. If you know of persons who are not receiving this
Newsletter (and naturally want to) please forward it to them and they can
click here to
be placed back on the List.
My thanks to
ESKOM and Trans Africa Projects for keeping my mind off murderous thoughts and
welcome to MEGCHEM as a Subscriber. Also to VOLKSWAGEN for helping to fill seats
at my Workshops. PE rules! Or is that Uitenhage!
There
is still ample room at my upcoming workshops and all you need do is to click
one last time on
http://www.klasslooch.com/june_booking.htm
and you’ll still earn 10% discount per
delegate. Remember no-one is immune to prosecution
in terms of the OHS Act, yet it is mostly employers and users of plant
and machinery who are exposed to criminal prosecution. The reason for this is to
be found in the extensive duties which the OHS Act imposes upon them, thereby
creating a host of legal rights for employees (sections
8 and
13), persons in general (section
9), recipients of articles and substances utilised at a workplace,
clients for whom articles (structures) are designed, erected or installed.
(Section 10 and read with the
Construction Regulations). Criminal liability emanates from the infringement of
these statutory rights by employers or users. Juristic persons or corporate
bodies along with natural persons such as the CEO and his or her team of
section 16(2) “Assigned Persons’ are regarded as employers and users
for prosecution purposes. (Thought I’d scare you a little)!
You can download
a Registration in MS Word by
clicking here. (Sorry that was another click).
As always
Your
Devil’s Advocate.
PS. A cigarette shortens your life by 2
minutes
A beer shortens your life by 4 minutes.
A working day shortens your life
by 9 hours!!!!
next
newsletter
|