Maritime Union Demands Tougher Penalties For Reckless Managers
The Maritime Union wants managers and board chairs held individually accountable for workplace deaths.
Maritime Union National Secretary Craig
Harrison says tougher penalties were needed following the
sentencing of Ports of Auckland Limited (POAL) today for
their role in the death of a young worker and
father.
On 27 August 2018, 23-year old Laboom Dyer
died at the Ports of Auckland after the Straddle Carrier he
was operating tipped over during night
shift.
Earlier this year, POAL admitted being
guilty of failing to comply with a duty that exposes an
individual to risk of death or serious injury or serious
illness under the Health and Safety at Work
Act.
At a sentencing today at the Auckland
District Court, Judge Evangelos Thomas fined POAL $540,000
and awarded $130,000 in reparations to Mr Dyer’s
family.
Mr Harrison says senior managers and board
chairs need to be held individually accountable for
recklessness under current laws.
Corporate fines
were simply a business cost, and managers who created unsafe
work environments were not being held accountable, he
says.
It is the rate payers of Auckland who are
paying for the failures of management, says Mr
Harrison.
“Until those managers who have a duty
of care to their workforce are prosecuted for recklessness
under the Health and Safety at Work Act, we will continue to
see a culture of profit before safety.”
Mr
Harrison says a productivity bonus system opposed by the
union had contributed to the culture at Ports of Auckland
which has led to the sentencing today.
He says the
Maritime Union had raised concerns over the driving culture
and management had been aware of the problem before the
death of Mr Dyer.
Mr Harrison says management were
well aware of how the Straddle Carriers were operating in
the port as the Straddle Carriers automatically reported
safety incidents.
It was only after this incident
that management took steps to change the
culture.
There have been numerous preventable
deaths on the New Zealand waterfront and another had
occurred in 2020 at Ports of Auckland, says Mr
Harrison.
The Mayor of Auckland Phil Goff had
recently ordered an inquiry into health and safety at Ports
of Auckland, which is owned by Auckland City through its
business arm.
Mr Harrison says the Government must
widen this inquiry to a national level and look at how
productivity pressures and fatigue were killing
workers.