Degradation of Health and Occupational Safety Must Be Declared a Crises

28th April 2022

Degradation of Health and Occupational Safety Must Be Declared a Crises

Photo by: Bloomberg

On this World Health and Occupational Safety Day, The Federation of Unions of South Africa (FEDUSA) remains deeply concerned by ongoing unsafe working environments across South Africa. While South Africa may have world class legislation, making it mandatory for businesses and places of work to have safe and healthy environments for workers, regular and blatant flouting of these regulations have become the order of the day. 

Over the last decade, corruption has become more rampant, with many of Government’s oversight bodies being undermined, for nefarious reasons, thus limiting its own ability to enforce regulations and ensure safe workspaces. 

“The recent flooding in Kwazulu-Natal in particular has shown how many businesses have not built environments that are secure to work in during adverse weather events, leading to avoidable death and destruction”. In addition, “As the effects of global climate change, pandemics and various other crises continue to impact us with increasing regularity, it is more important than ever that a renewed focus is placed on occupational health and safety in workplaces across the country, to ensure that the harm is limited during the next crises.” Government must acknowledge that it has blood on its hands ; It has exacerbated job losses, income insecurity, destruction of infrastructure, collapse of businesses, stalled economic growth, failure to protect school – going children who are faced with catch – up programmes due to COVID – 19, and a dismal response time to restore service delivery.   

Beyond large crises like the pandemic or floods, hearing loss, tuberculosis and hazardous chemical exposure related diseases remain the top causes of occupational disease claims, ignoring the many cases that go unclaimed due to exploitative practices.[1] The fact that many of these diseases are easily avoidable with appropriate protective equipment shows the contempt many employers have for the health and safety of their employees. Minister Thulas Nxesi outlined in his Report on the State of Occupational Health and Safety, on 28 July 2021, that 92 fatalities were  recorded, a total of 26 073 claims were submitted to the Compensation Fund and disbursements amounting to just under R90 – million were issued. Cry the beloved country! 

FEDUSA urges government to consider the degradation of health and occupational safety as a crises that must be addressed with conviction.  

Urgent interventions and stringent enforcement, by strengthening of regulatory entities, and where appropriate, adapting laws and regulations to make it easier to prevent abuse must be implemented without fear or favour. FEDUSA further calls on business to proactively clean up its act and stop creating dangerous environments for workers in the pursuit of excessive profits.

 

Issued by FEDUSA