Lisa Owen interviews Marama Fox & Jeff Sissons
Lisa Owen interviews Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox & CTU general counsel Jeff Sissons
CTU will challenge new health and
safety law if it fails to include farming, as law promises
reps for high risk industries. Sissons: “…the
law says that high-risk industries will have health and
safety reps. So we think that any regulations that exclude
agriculture are excluding some really crucial high-risk
industries.” Maori Party co-leader says Minister
Michael Woodhouse told her all livestock farming would be
deemed high risk and she doesn’t understand why dairy
isn’t not included Fox says National has promised
Maori Party further consultation on the high risk list and
“I'm going to be making sure that this Government lives up
to those commitments that they've given us” Sissons admits the law gives “tiny gains” but much
less than first indicated. “The Government's promised us a
limousine, and they've given us a Skoda.” Sissons:
“It's going to lead to more deaths, and it's going to lead
to more injuries.” Fox admits it’s “not the
best that we can do”, but it’s about “pragmatism”
and “it’s a better law than the current one” On Tainui claim for Auckland land, Fox says National’s
use of surplus land for housing has opened the door to more
claims as Maori will “always put their hand up” when
land becomes available.
Lisa Owen:
Welcome back. It started as a push for safer workplaces
after the Pike River disaster, but is now bogged down by
worm farms and mini golf. Under the Government's proposed
Health and Safety bill, most farms won't be considered
high-risk, but curtain installing and cat breeding
apparently will be. It matters because risky industries have
to have health and safety representatives if workers ask.
Well, Maori Party co-leader Marama Fox is supporting the
legislation, and she's in the studio now along with Jeff
Sissons, who's the General Counsel for the Council of Trade
Unions. Good morning to you both.
Marama
Fox: Morning.
Jeff Sissons: Morning.
If I
can come to you first, Mrs Fox, you were claiming credit for
this law a couple of days ago. Now it's become a laughing
stock. Why are you still supporting it?
Fox:
We're not claiming credit for the law. We're claiming credit
for the changes that we've been able to get through; changes
that people thought would not get through, had no faith that
the government would release the list of high-risk
industries, had no faith that the government would do
something about work groups and the structure of those. And
so, actually, we've worked really, really hard to try and
fight on behalf of the worker, because we care for workers.
And the myth that we don't is an absolute
myth.
Did you drill down into that list of
high-risk occupations, though?
Fox:
Absolutely. Absolutely. So, I'm disappointed, because the
conversation—
So you knew that worm farmers
were covered, but farmers were not?
Fox:
Well, the conversation that I had with the Minister was
around agriculture. So we're happy to see mining, we're
happy to see forestry; those things are important. And so
when I spoke to him, he said that agriculture won't all be
covered, but if you work with livestock, it would be. So I'm
disappointed that there's not dairy and those things in
there, but we do have a commitment that there will be
further consultation on this list. So I'm going to be making
sure that this government lives up to those commitments that
they've given us.
What exactly— when you say
it's open for consultation, what exactly are the commitments
that you're wanting to live up to?
Fox:
Agriculture. I do not understand that you cannot have sheep
farming, dairy farming, beef farming, cattle farming
included in this. I don't understand that, and that is
something that we would like to see strengthened up. I am
grateful that we do have a list, because we weren't going to
get one, and condition of our support was on seeing what
that list was.
Jeff Sissons, the Maori Party
saying there that this is strides forward; this is a better
law than what we've got. They're right, isn't it? It's
better.
Sissons: New Zealand has one of the
worst health and safety records compared to comparable
countries. We have twice as many fatalities as Australia;
we've got more than three times as many as the UK. We're
starting from a really low base here, and I think that we
will see some tiny gains from this law, but as it was
introduced, we would've got some real change. The
Government's promised us a limousine, and they've given us a
Skoda.
Do you think it's going to be too
intimidating? Because the people are going to have to ask
for a health and safety rep if they're in high-risk, or 20
or more workers, they can ask for this. But do you think in
some situations that it would be too intimidating to get
that rep in the workplace?
Sissons: I think
that's probably right, because it's really important to
realise that this exclusion of low-risk industries is a step
back. Under current law, if workers ask for a health and
safety rep, then they can have a health and safety rep. But
what we've seen in lots of the worst, most risky industries
is that that those health and safety reps aren't there, and
I think that is partly about employer
intimidation.
Mrs Fox, there we have it —
the most disempowered, they're the ones who are going to
miss out. They're the people that you want to do the right
thing for, though.
Fox: Exactly, and those
were our concerns. And so when we took
those—
But you're still voting for
it.
Fox: But when we took those to the
Minister, our concerns about being able to one, ask for
health and safety rep, two, be able to structure the work
group that your health and safety rep will be assigned to,
we were given some assurances. So if you are unfairly
treated because you've asked for a health and safety rep or
you disagree with your employer, you can go to WorkSafe and
be backed up about that. You cannot be — be law, under
this law — penalised for asking for health and safety for
ensuring that you are safe. And so if employers are acting
that way, then they can be held to account. Now, I asked
Jeff the other night — I wanted to know, 'Do you think
that this piece of legislation is a better piece of
legislation than what is currently there?' Because under the
current law, we have had all of these deaths, all of these
injuries, and that has not helped our workers. This law, I
feel, is a better law. It's not the best that we can do, and
Jeff, you're response to me was that it's like the
three-legged stool. We've strengthened this leg around the
state, we've straightened this leg around the employer, but
we may have weakened this leg around the worker. But as a
total, you told me that you feel it could be a stronger
law.
Sissons: And let's talk about the three-legged
stool, because I think that's really important. So, all of
the best health and safety laws have a balance between the
workers, the employers and the government as a regulator,
and countries that do health and safety much better than us,
they respect the right of workers to insist on good health
and safety. And what this law does is makes it so that
employers have the call as to the health and safety systems.
This law is fundamentally disempowering of workers in terms
of how they set up health and safety systems. Normally,
evidence shows that that's going to lead to worse outcomes.
It's going to lead to more deaths, and it's going to lead to
more injuries.
But Mrs Fox, I just want to
step in here, because you've said this is an improvement.
But at the same time, you've still got more than 100 deaths
in the last five years in the farming industry, and I know
you want change, but it doesn't seem like you're going to
get farms on that list. Have you prepared to wear that? To
turn a blind eye to those hundred families who don't have
their family member?
Fox: See, I don't think
that I'm turning a blind eye, because I could vote against
it. I could turn around tomorrow and vote against this law,
and it will still get through. It will still go, because
they have the numbers, and so we put that on balance about
whether or not we vote for it, and how can we get better
gains? And we get better gains by fronting the minister,
looking him in the eye and saying, 'Minister, we don't think
this is good enough.' And I agree with Jeff — we need to
protect our workers. So I've been given assurances that in
this legislation and as it reads, there must be worker
engagement. Our SOP helped strengthen that worker
engagement.
But do you really think this is a
good law, or are you just being pragmatic and taking what
you can get?
Fox: I think it is about
pragmatism. I think it's a better law than the current one.
I don't think it goes far enough. I do believe that the
Government have cut back on some of the things that need to
be there, and so we've pushed them on that. We've been able
to get a couple of concessions from them, which I think are
major concessions, and that's why we're supporting it
through, because it's actually better than what's currently
there.
Jeff, I just want to bring you in here.
Helen Kelly is actually tweeting at the moment that the CTU
will try for a judicial review if farming is excluded at the
end of the day.
Sissons: That's right,
because the law says that high-risk industries will have
health and safety reps. So we think that any regulations
that exclude agriculture are excluding some really crucial
high-risk industries. Almost a quarter of workers on farms,
according to the latest ACC statistics, make a claim every
year for workplace injuries. And I was reading an Otago
study that said only a third of workers on farms who are
injured claim to ACC. Farming is a high-risk industry, and I
think law that doesn't include it is making a mockery of the
term high-risk.
I think you both accept that
farming is a high-risk industry. It's not on the list here,
though. But in terms of practicalities, I was just speaking
to a farmer yesterday who said, 'There's three people on
this farm — the farmer, the farmer's wife and another
person.' And so do you think they should really have a
health and safety rep? That's bureaucratic overkill, isn't
it?
Sissons: I think that Andrew made a good
point in the earlier story, which is that a health and
safety rep is there if the workers ask for them. And a
worker is going to ask for them when there's a big problem.
And we know that small businesses are less safe than large
businesses. And a health and safety rep gets trained in
health and safety, so it's a way to get knowledge into some
of the businesses which need health and safety knowledge the
most.
Fox: What the law also says, as it currently
stands, that everybody must be engaged— you still have to
have health and safety standards. If you've got a place of
three people, your health and safety rep will be your
employer, surely. And you have to have health and safety
standards. They can't get away with doing nothing. That's
not what this law says. It doesn't say have a health and
safety rep or nothing. It says you must have health and
safety regulations, you must have standards, but if you're
in a small business and there's only you and a couple of
people, that person may be the employer and we do this
together. But in high-risk industries — and I agree — it
should be standard.
So, Jeff, there's no
blanket exemption here.
Sissons: Marama's
using an argument that the minister uses quite a lot, where
he says that there's a need for worker engagement in all
businesses. Now, there's a need under the current law for
worker participation in all businesses, but that's a law
that's never been enforced by WorkSafe. This is the system
that is failing us, so there's nothing new in
there.
The minister is saying cajole farmers
into making changes.
Fox: No, well, I agree
about the WorkSafe thing, and this is the conversation that
I've had with the minister. And part of the communication
that we've had to try and strengthen this up is — how do
workers know? How does WorkSafe become an advocate for
health and safety rather than that person at the end of a
tragedy or at the end of an accident who comes and
investigates? How do they become proactive to assist workers
to get the best out of their health and safety? And that's
what we're going to be asking them to do, to ensure that
they aren't just the big stick at the end of the line, but
actually be proactive, get into those small industries —
and all industries — and assist workers to establish good,
strong health and safety practices.
Sissons: WorkSafe
needs to do both. It needs to be the stick and the carrot.
But the government has underfunded WorkSafe. Ernst & Young
said it should be 100 million.
We're out of
time, so let's leave it there. But before we go — 20
seconds, Marama. What do you think of Tainui's claim in
respect of Auckland? Is this all about the Government taking
surplus land for housing?
Fox: I do think
it's in response to Government taking away the land for
surplus housing. And there's something that the government
needs to fundamentally understand, that Maori have been
dispossessed of land; Maori have had that stripped away for
a whole lot of dubious reasons. And if at any time land
becomes 'available', then they will always put their hand
up, no matter what their Treaty claim has said, because they
see it as an opportunity to be able to get something back of
what has been taken, and also to participate in providing
social housing for their own people. That's what they're
asking for. And I do think that this claim by Tainui is
partially in a response to that, and I think the Government
needs to get it right here.
Transcript provided by Able. www.able.co.nz
ENDS