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OHS Chat & Skinner Newsletter : 'Humpty Dumpty'
Dear
Colleagues
Since my last newsletter we have experienced a spectacular, preventable and
predictable tragic OHS event which resulted in a person being permanently
paralysed and our beloved President ducking (once more) for cover as a structure
collapses all around him. He even fled to safer shores in Liberia right after
the incident! Spectacular because the entire event was filmed, preventable
because there is no damn excuse and predictable because a culture has taken root
in this country whereby everyone does what they want with impunity. Also
predictably recriminations abound as to why the various controls, whereby we
ensure our President has a safe working environment, were flouted. As the Star
newspaper reported on 16 August 2003 it was ‘an accident waiting to happen’.
And what a sorry indictment of the OHS enforcement agencies who are supposed to
control these matters. Naturally this incident has galvanised DoL’s
damage-control machinery into action and we are promised that those responsible
will be publicly tarred and feathered. But who is really to blame for failing to
instil an OHS culture in this country? Does
‘SA health, safety stink’
as suggested by the ACDP?
Click here for more.
As all
this took place against the backdrop of the Construction Regulations which were
promulgated, without any fanfare or even mention on DoL’s outdated OHS website,
into law on 18 July 2003. Could it be that the very set of new prescriptive
regulations, designed to prevent this type of tragedy, were ignored even before
the ink was dry? After all the erection of the marquee that collapsed was
‘construction work’ as defined, it was a ‘structure’ as defined and it wasn’t
50% complete on 18 July 2003 so it fell within the scope of application of the
new regulations. But what puzzles me is that Construction Regulation 3 provides
for the principal contractor involved in construction work to notify the
provincial Director, DoL, in the form of Annexure A of certain types of
construction work. I may be interpreting this subregulation a wee too narrowly
but I cannot understand why our (OHS?)* law enforcement agency, the Inspection &
Enforcement Service within DoL, with their ‘experts’ on tap, was not more
pro-actively involved – even if not legally compelled to - when they knew the
structure would be erected as part of the International Women’s Day
celebrations. Even more so when a similar structure had collapsed on Worker’s
Day. So who is to blame? I guess the client as defined has a lot of pleeze-explaining
to do since Construction Regulation 4 compels clients to prepare a health and
safety specification for the construction work and to provide it to the
principal contractor. Was it done? The client is most probably the Department of
Sport, Recreation, Culture etc. And then there is the principal contractor and
contractor who had to ensure the structure was safe and had to prepare, in terms
of the construction regulations, a host of new OHS documentation. They are very
much in the firing line. Was a Construction Work Supervisor, a full-time
competent person, appointed as per subregulation 6? There is even provision in
the regulations for a Construction Safety Officer to be appointed in writing to
assist the construction Work Supervisor. In this regard I guess we are
witnessing the dawn of compulsory Safety Officer appointments as required (and
predicted by myself), in certain circumstances, by the MHS Act.
*As
many of you may know South Africa is one of the few industrialised nations to
dilute the effectiveness of its (non-mining sector) OHS law enforcement agency,
previously the OHS Inspectorate, into a broad-based general labour legislation
enforcement agency with diluted focus on Employment Equity, UIF, Skills
Development Levies and other more popular pieces of social State
income-generating legislation. The mines retain a specialised OHS law
enforcement agency but this may also be under threat when the various agencies
combine. The last ‘integration’ process within DoL, whereby OHS specialised
inspectors were compelled to abandon their expertise and become generalists,
resulted in a flurry of resignations and one wonders / fears how this broader
‘integration’ will go down. And while on the topic of generalist inspectors, all
'madams' in KZN be warned. DoL has unleashed 160 inspectors to check whether you
are paying UIF and a living wage for domestic employees. That’s give factories a
breather. See
'Suburban blitz on KZN
madams', IOL of 18 August 2003.
Since the Construction Regulations require very specific OHS documentation, one
may ask whether the broad
section 37(2) Written Agreement has become superfluous
as regards construction mandataries. Perhaps. But continue concluding these
Written Agreements as they go some distance in combating that nasty
presumption-in-law which potentially punishes employers for the wrongdoings of
their mandataries.
All
this and more in our
November workshops. Subscribers can qualify for up to
45% discount per delegate if you book
on-line before the end of September. Non-Subscribers
can qualify for as much as 20% discount in the same way.
Click here
if
you don’t like paying at all! Rumour has it that we may already have our
new draft OHS Act published for comment by the end of the year. You will recall
that DoL undertook to review the OHS Act as part of its
Turnaround Strategy 2001 – 2004 and 2004 is almost
upon us. I assume that this is the promised revamping of the OHS Act before
ultimately merging with the MHS Act.
Click here for more on the merger.
Click here to book on-line for November workshops.
Click here for Cyber- Subscription & Products.
Click on
reply to comment.
This is
your agony aunt signing off.
The
Devil’s Advocate. 
Exercise your constitution right to access to information.
Section 32 of the Bill of Rights.
(1) Everyone has the right of access to any information held by the state.
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