Today is International Workers Memorial Day. When we go home
to our loved ones tonight, we should remember the twenty Scottish workers last
year, three a week across the UK, who didn’t make it home to their families
because they died at work.
And it isn’t only deaths. 1.2 million workers suffered from work
related illness last year – from long-standing causes such as exposure to
chemicals, to the mental health pressures modern work techniques are placing on
many workers. As UNISON’s annual violence at work survey shows, more than
30,000 public service workers in Scotland reported violent incidents last year.
Yet we still have some employers who think violence is part of the job.
IWMD is also an opportunity for us to focus on health and
safety as trade unions. It should be a core part of what we all do and shouldn’t
be left to a few specialists. That’s why we make a special effort today to
undertake safety inspections that make our workplaces safer. Something the UK
Government seeks to undermine in the Trade Union Bill.
Health and safety is also under direct threat from
government policy. The HSE budget is being cut in half by 2020, making
enforcement the exception rather than the rule. The same applies to council
environmental health departments, whose statutory safety functions have been
significantly reduced. The UK Government has also pursued a de-regulation
agenda that dismisses health and safety as ‘red tape’. As in so many policy
areas, this government’s priority is always to put profit first and the workers
are simply expendable.
Wider public service cuts and job losses put extra pressures
on the remaining staff, with the temptation to cut corners an ever present risk.
Not to mention the physical and mental health toll it takes out of the
workforce.
This year there is an inevitable
focus on Europe. A new TUC report finds that EU
legislation has helped stop illnesses and injuries at work, and saved lives. Much
of the health & safety law in the UK is now underpinned by the EU, with almost
two-thirds (63%) of new British health & safety regulations introduced
between 1997-2009 originating in Europe (41 out of 65 laws). The biggest cheerleaders for Brexit see
protections for workers, like health and safety, as just red tape to be binned.
So especially today, let’s remember the dead, but also fight for the
living.
UNISON Scotland staff in Glasgow gather to mark IWMD.
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