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Jun 20, 2017 Becky Bouterey

Worksafe CEO Slams Industry Safety Measures Following Five Deaths in a Week

Strong Message from WorkSafe New Zealand

In the first two weeks of June 2017 five people were killed in New Zealand workplaces. This pushed the year's toll to 30, only 19 shy of 2016's entire total.

Nicole Rosie, the CEO of WorkSafe New Zealand spoke with NewsHub on this matter – the interview can be found here.

Rosie is urging businesses to tighten up their safety measures around the workplace and to start taking leadership of health and safety risks in the workplace.

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“It’s the same stuff that’s been killing people in New Zealand for the past ten years. It comes down to critical risks such as forklifts, falls from heights and people interactions.”

Rosie said that overall New Zealand businesses have been focusing on the lower risk areas such as slips and trips. However, they need to go back and start focusing on the big area, the critical risks that can kill people. Once these have been identified they need to eliminate the risks (if possible) or put controls in place that reduce them.  For example, don’t have people in the space where forklifts operate or get detection devices put onto the forklift that detect humans near-by.

Worksafe have been seeing that with increased economic activity comes more workplace deaths.

All New Zealand businesses need to improve their health and safety risk management. That is why the CEO of WorkSafe New Zealand chose to speak to the media to emphasis the importance of New Zealand businesses focusing on the right stuff.

 

Takeaway

  1. New Zealand businesses have been focusing too much on the small stuff.
  2. Need to focus on the critical risks - forklifts, working at heights, machinery.
  3. Then eliminate the risks or put controls in place that reduce or mitigate them.

 

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Published by Becky Bouterey June 20, 2017