This is an AMIEU archive site
Click here for the current AMIEU website
Pigs Brains

Pigs Brains

Do you work in a pig abattoir?
Is compressed air used to blast brain tissue from severed pigs heads?

Read this article and find out about potential risk!

Alimta

Alimta and Mesothelioma

Today 8th November the PBS recommended that Alimta be subsidised. Find out more.

 

Find out about treatment for the asbestos related disease Mesothelioma

Behaviour Based Safety


What are Behaviour Based Safety Programs?

Behavioural Based Safety is an approach to safety that focuses on workers' behaviour as the cause of most work-related injuries and illnesses.   These programs are being introduced in Australian workplaces, and so we have produced a Kit for health and safety reps to provide information on what they are, what's wrong with them and what workers can do in their workplaces.

Check out lots of material

Zoonotic Deaths


In August 2006 two workers in Britain die from diseases caught from animals. One dies of anthrax and one from rabbit flu.

Injured at Work? Claiming Compensation


Injuries or Illnesses WorkCover Entitlements

Despite fighting for health and safety this is an industry where workers do get injured too often. The injuries that are most common are injuries from 'manual handling'. The next most common are lacerations. The range of injuries and illnesses is too long to go into here.
If you are injured or ill and your work really contributes to this you are entitled to compensation.
What are some of the things that you need to do if you are injured
Find out about
claiming WorkCover
Check what are Medical and Like Services
Find out what are
your entitlements
How do you sort out your entitlements in the retail sector
Find out where things stand with Rehabilitation and Returning to Work

Training




H&S Reps
Training

The next OHS Reps training course will be held at AMIEU from 4 to 8 August 2008. 

Find pics from a previous course 
See what it was like behind here. 
As it is approved by WorkSafe your employers must let you come as an elected health and safety representative. 
FIND OUT MORE ABOUT
YOUR RIGHTS TO TRAINING

 

Q Fever

ABC Landline program about Q Fever in August 2005 raised awareness of many. Check out what was on it.
Day of Mourning

The canary  has been sent down mines for centuries to show if the air was turning bad. The canary died first - hopefully giving enough time for workers to escape.
Memorial

Labour Hire

Victorian Parliament's Economic Development Committee Inquiry into Labour Hire Employment was set up in 2003. The AMIEU put in a submission as did Trades Hall. In preparing for this there was a survey of workers to find out the impact of employment through labour hire. if you want to find out more click on here.

Smithfield
WASHINGTON - When Tereza Nieto dreamed of working in North Carolina, she never imagined this: hog carcasses zipping past her inside a chilly factory cooler, a fallen pig, an injured back, the inability to work.
read on
Risks - Gas Flush Meat


Management Secrecy - A Threat to Health and Safety

Members will be aware that a trial of the use of gas flush meat is being carried out in Coles Myer stores. It is clear that Coles Myer are increasing the numbers of stores that are being supplied from a centralised company who are providing the gas flushed meat.

Read More

ONLINE USERS
Online Users:
Members:
0
Anonymous: 4

   
   
Homicide


Company President Convicted of Homicide In Deaths of Two Workers

Occasionally, all too rarely, justice is done; those responsible for the preventable deaths of workers receive appropriate punishment.

The former president of a water and sewer company, Brent Weidman, has been
found guilty by a jury of two counts of negligent homicide and two counts of endangerment in the deaths in 2001 of 26-year-old James Gamble and 62-year-old Gary Lanser, who were killed in a confined space incident while working on an underground sewage tank. Last year, Arizona prosecutors Christina Fitzpatrick and Mark Horlings convinced a jury to find the Far West Water and Sewer Company guilty on five of the six felony charges filed against it. In January, a Yuma judge imposed $1.77 million in criminal fines against the company.

The jury acquitted Weidman of a charge of aggravated assault for the injury of a worker who survived the incident, but has permanent lung damage.

This tragedy was unfortunately typical of confined space incidents, where one of the workers killed was the attempted rescuer and two other rescuers narrowly escaped death:

Gamble entered the tank to remove a plug that was blocking a line into the tank and died after being overwhelmed by hydrogen sulfide fumes when a pump that ran raw sewage into the tank from a different line was turned on. Lanser died trying to save Gamble,

Enclosed areas or "confined spaces" in sewers and wastewater treatment plants (or anywhere where there is rotting organic material) are notorious for accumulations of hydrogen sulfide which can kill workers and their rescuers. Confined spaces can also develop life-threatening oxygen deficiencies and generate explosive methane gas. For this reason, OSHA has a detailed
Confined Space standard which requires the air to be monitored, a means to safely rescue workers if they are overcome by fumes, and extensive training.

According to the prosecutors on the case, the violations were so blatant, and it was so obvious that the workers had no idea of the danger inherent in confined spaces, that a criminal prosecution was completely appropriate. The air in the tank had not been tested during the day of the incident, the workers weren't properly trained and the required safety and rescue procedures weren't followed.

The families of the dead workers were pleased with the jury's verdict:
Ed Thrasher, Gamble's stepfather, who smiled as the guilty verdicts were read aloud in court, was also pleased with the jury's decision.

"I thought the jury did a good job weighing all the evidence and coming back with the right decision," said Thrasher, who attended every day of the 22-day trial. "It's been a long five years."

Both [Gamble's mother, Carol] Borieo and Thrasher added they felt justice had been served and that they hope the jury's decision will help save other lives as well as make companies take safety more seriously.

***

"Maybe this will make sure the people with the big paychecks, fancy titles and perks will realize they can be held responsible," Thrasher said. "It's really shameful when the bottom line is more important than people who work for the company."
This is but one of thousands of cases every year where clear violations of OSHA standards lead to the preventable deaths of workers. Most employers get away with a relatively small fines (the total OSHA fine in this case was $31, 500), but sometimes aggressive prosecutors can not only punish the killers, but send an important message out to employers nationwide: Workplace killing means jail.
 


Back


Page registered by Administrator Victorian Branch on 16/06/06 09:54 for topic OH&S.
This page has been read 618 times
PrintSend to a friend
© 2002 - oxiigen - life support for business - all rights reserved - POWERED BY CHILLI CMS
Terms and conditions - Privacy Policy

archive site by farnham street neighbourhood learning centre