Forest Owners Association
MEDIA RELEASE
7 August 2013
Forest owners support workplace safety reforms
The Forest Owners Association (FOA) welcomes the government's workplace health and safety reforms announced today.
“The government has a vital role to play in improving safety in the workplace,” says president Bill McCallum. “It has
the power to pull a range of levers that will influence attitudes, understandings and behaviours of all involved.”
He says lax attitudes to safety are prevalent in New Zealand and even with the best will in the world, it is a battle to
get safety to be seen as the number one priority by every individual in the workplace.
“What we desperately need is a change in culture at all levels of our society, so that unsafe work practices are
rejected as being socially unacceptable. We have seen huge changes in social attitudes to drink driving and tobacco
smoking, thanks largely to government support for campaigns addressing those issues.
“We now need the same focus brought to bear on cultural attitudes that portray risk-taking as being acceptable.
“The real game changer will be when we get acceptance from everyone involved – from the boardroom through to the worker
in the forest – that we have a collective and personal responsibility for health and safety. This is a responsibility to
and by the worker, as well as to their workmates, their families and the businesses they work for.”
He says members of the FOA and the Forest Industry Contractors Association (FICA) aim to do better than the government
goal of reducing workplace injuries and deaths by 25% by 2020.
“We are acutely conscious of our workplace death toll and the huge impact this has on the families, friends and
workmates of those involved. No workplace fatality is acceptable,” Mr McCallum says.
“Forest owners have implemented a number of major safety initiatives, but we are open to new ideas about how we can do
things better and, in conjunction with FICA, the FOA is initiating an independent review of forest workplace safety.
“The reforms announced today are significant and will reinforce the efforts of both FICA and FOA towards creating a zero
harm workplace. But while strict enforcement of regulations is critical, without strong leadership from all forest
owners and contractors and 100% commitment to safety from all involved in the industry we will not achieve the zero harm
goal we are seeking.”
ENDS