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| For the latest update on Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) news and information from across Australia. OHS News - January 2007Elevator Crushes ElectricianJanuary 28, 2007 2:48pm A lift on an oil tanker has killed an Indian National off the Perth Coast. The 36-year-old electrician was working on an elevator on the British Mallard tanker when the accident occurred about 6.30pm (WDT) yesterday, police Inspector Trevor Davis said. Unloading pipes touch powerlinesJanuary 26, 2007 8:32am Article from: AAP Two Tasmanian men were killed after irrigation pipe that they were loading into a ute, touch power lines. Police say the incident occurred about 1.20pm (AEDT) yesterday at the Croftside Property, at Powranna, in the state's north-east. “One of the pipes contacted an overhead high-voltage power line above the utility,” Tasmania Police acting inspector Peter McKenzie said. “When the pipe contacted the powerline, both men were electrocuted>.” Both were in their early 20s and Insp McKenzie said the incident had devastated the rural community. “(It) is a tragic reminder of the need to be so careful when working in the vicinity of powerlines.” Workplace Standards and police are investigating the incident. Safety Meeting cuts into pay for Australia Post WorkersJanuary 25, 2007 01:41pm Article from: AAP AUSTRALIA Post have docked a half a days pay from employees who had a safety meeting that went too long. About 30 Rockdale Mail Centre staff are protesting outside the workplace after being told they would lose half a day's wages because the meeting, scheduled during a meal break, ran over into working hours. Under the new IR laws it was considered an illegal stop-work meeting, allowing Australia Post to dock half a day's wages. Australia Post spokeswoman Sheridan Beattie said the Communications Union, which arranged the meeting to discuss the dangers of a new bundling system being trialled at the centre, was fully aware of its legal obligation. "The action resulted from staff being directed to return to work, when a meeting organised by their union representatives during their meal break ran over time by over 30 minutes, due to the union representatives arriving with only 12 minutes left of the staff's meal break," Ms Beattie said. "The union is fully aware of both their and Australia Post's legal requirements, and it is unfortunate they still encouraged their members to take this action today." She said contingencies were in place to ensure mail was delivered to Rockdale residents and businesses today. Union state secretary Jim Metcher said the heavy-handed move was evidence of the ridiculousness of the federal Government's WorkChoices laws. "We have a group of 30 workers who want to go back to work, but are being told they will not be paid if they do so," Mr Metcher said. "We have management saying that under WorkChoices, even 15 minutes to be briefed on the safe operation of new equipment amounts to industrial action that draws punitive measures." Farm Death InvestigationJanuary 24, 2007 09:10am Article from: AAP A Mareeba man was injured on a farm in Mareeba yesterday. The 33-year-old man was reportedly injured by farm machinery at the property about 10km east of Mareeba shortly before midday yesterday (AEST). He was taken to Cairns Base Hospital but died while having surgery about 1.15pm. Detectives had spoken to a number of people present when the man was injured, police said. Worksafe Inspector tussle leads to finesJanuary 23, 2007 09:36pm Article from: AAP Two men have been fined $15,000 for taking film from a Worksafe Inspector and burying it with an escavator. Mildura Magistrate Dan Muling today imposed the penalty after the men pleaded guilty to charges including assault and failing to comply with an inspector's direction. Worksafe Victoria executive director John Merritt said the case reinforced the message that the organisation's inspectors must be allowed to do their job without interference. "An inspector's camera was taken from him and the film buried in a Mildura drainage project trench in February last year," Mr Merritt said today. The inspector had sought to photograph a roadside work site after first warning its operators that correct safety measures were not in place, posing a risk to motorists and workers. Instead, the inspector's camera was forcibly taken from him, its film removed and thrown into the ditch and an excavator used to bury it. "WorkSafe's inspectors play a vital role in community efforts to stop people being killed or hurt at work," Mr Merritt said. "We take seriously what we see as efforts to undermine their duties through physical means or intimidation." Peter Prostamo, 45, of Reservoir, was fined $6500 and ordered to pay costs of $8557, while Marcello De Frenza, 35, of Mornington Peninsula, was ordered to pay $1000. Convictions were not recorded. Diver Fights Off Great WhiteJanuary 23, 2007 03:04pm Article from: AAP A Professional Abalone Diver Was Bitten On The Head By A Great White Shark Today Before Poking It In The Eye To Escape. Eric Nerhus, 41, was diving with his 25-year-old son and a group of other divers at Cape Howe, near Eden, when he was attacked by the 3m white pointer about 10.30am (AEDT). The shark grabbed Mr Nerhus by the head, crushing his face mask inwards and breaking his nose, said friend and fellow diver Dennis Luobikis. "He was actually bitten by the head down, the shark swallowed his head," Mr Luobikis said. The shark then took a second bite, clamping its jaws around Mr Nerhus's torso and tearing deep cuts in each side of his body. Mr Nerhus, a well-known local diver with more than five years' experience, struggled free from the shark's jaws and was pulled back aboard the boat by his son. Two other divers in a nearby boat gave him first aid and one radioed his father, who was flying overhead in a spotter plane, to call for help. The Snowy Hydro Rescue Helicopter arrived shortly after 11.10am and took Mr Nerhus, who was suffering from shock and blood loss, to Wollongong Hospital. He is in a serious but stable condition. Mr Nerhus told his rescuers he poked the shark in the eye to fight his way free, a Snowy Hydro Rescue Helicopter spokeswoman said. Mr Luobikis, 53, said it was a miracle his friend was alive. "Eric is a tough boy, he's super fit," he said. "But I would say that would test anyone's resolve, being a fish lunch." "He'd have a better chance of winning the lotto (than surviving that attack), and I think he would have rather done that." There had been a rash of white pointer sightings in recent weeks because of unusually cold water off Eden, but such an attack was unheard of, Mr Luobikis said. "I have been a professional diver in Eden for 36 years and I'm not aware of any white pointer attacks in that time," he said. Rough conditions deterred many divers from venturing out this morning, Mr Luobikis said. Swimmers were evacuated from three popular south coast beaches last week after sharks were spotted during aerial patrols. The white pointer, or great white shark, is the world's largest known predatory fish, with an average length of 4m-5m. It can grow up to 6m and thrives in colder waters. Fallen tree kills loggerJanuary 22, 2007 06:45pm Article from: AAP In Tasmania A Forestry Worker Has Been Killed While Logging a Tree The logging contractor was working near Geeveston when he was struck on the head at 8.15am (AEDT) today. Police said colleagues tried to resuscitate the man, but paramedics pronounced him dead a short time later. A coronial investigation is underway and Workplace Standards and Tasmania Police are investigating. The age and identity of the man, who was a local resident, are yet to be released. Bee Sting Allergy Kills Rubbish CollectorJanuary 19, 2007 11:09am Article from: AAP A Bee Sting Has Killed a Rubbish Collector in the NSW Riverina District. The 45-year-old Narrandera man died in Griffith District Hospital yesterday, police said. He was stung while collecting rubbish from a property at Willbriggie, near Griffith, and died in hospital. The man was allergic to bee stings, an ambulance spokesman said. Teenage Killed at WorkJanuary 18 20074:40 p.m. A 14 year old teenager on work experience has been killed while a shipping container was being unloaded in the southern suburbs of Brisbane at around 1:30 p.m. today. It is believed that the teenager was squashed between the container and a truck as it was being unloaded from at a shopping centre car park located at Woodridge. The accident is being investigated by Workplace Health and Safety Officers. Workers Evacuated from FireJanuary 18, 2007 11:25am Article from: AAP WORKER'S fled as Joinery business goes up in smoke Fire Brigade crews were called to the factory in Edwardes Road, Reservoir, part of a seven-unit complex, about 10.20am, a spokeswoman said. Workers initially tried to fight the blaze, but were over powered by the fire. Explosions could be heard coming from the building. The factory was fully alight when fire crews arrived, but firefighters have stopped the blaze from spreading to adjoining buildings. They got the fire under control in 15 minutes. No one was injured. Threat from silo overJanuary 16, 2007 12:16pm Article from: AAP THE threat of explosion from a fire smouldering inside a NSW grain silo is over. Firefighters stifled the fire overnight with thick foam pumped through a hatch of the silo in the town of Cootamundra. It was feared there may be an explosion in the 10,000-tonne concrete structure, with grain dust particles posing a gunpowder-like combustion threat. Fire investigators woulld today determine whether the fire was still alight beneath the blanket, but the danger appeared to have passed, NSW Fire Brigades Superintendent Craig Brierley said. "At this stage the foam seems to have worked,'' he said. "From our point of view the stages of the incident are moving along as we would hope.'' It is hoped some of the 275 tonnes of grain inside the silo can be salvaged. Truckie injured in highway plungeJanuary 16, 2007 08:50am Article from: AAP A TRUCK driver was critically injured when his rig plunged off a highway in the NSW southern highlands early today. The truckie was trapped in the wreck for about 30 minutes after his B-double rig crashed shortly before 7am (AEDT), an NRMA CareFlight spokesman said. The northbound truck veered off the Hume Highway at the Cordeaux Creek bridge and plunged between the two divided sections of the road. The 57-year-old was ejected from his rig when it crashed. The man, of White Rock in Queensland, was taken to Liverpool Hospital with head, chest and internal injuries. Mining Accident in WAJanuary 10, 2007 06:32pm Article from: AAP A 30-year-old man has been crushed to death in a heavy vehicle accident in an underground mine in western NSW.
The man was operating a front-end loader by remote control at the Perilya Southern
Operations mine site near Broken Hill last night when the accident happened about 11pm
(CDT) yesterday, a NSW Department of Primary Industries (DPI) spokeswoman said. Broken Hill mining death investigatedWednesday, January 10, 2007. 2:32pm Source: ABC News An investigation is under way into the death of a man at an underground mine in Broken Hill, in far western New South Wales, last night. The man died when he was crushed against a wall by heavy machinery. The Department of Primary Industries says a report for the coroner is expected to take six to 12 months. Mining company Perilya has suspended operations at the mine, and counselling services are being provided for the man's friends and family. Adding insult to injuryJanuary 10, 2007 12:00 Article from: Daily Telegraph Bad law is turning ordinary NSW businesspeople into criminals, TOM SMITH * reports on his disturbing experience I'VE always considered myself an honest man but, at the age of 62 and after 40 years in business, I'm shocked and traumatised to find myself with a criminal conviction. What's more painful is I had no control over the events for which I have been deemed guilty. What happened to me can happen to any person involved in any business in NSW – but if you work in another state it would not happen. Whether you run a one-person business or are involved in any level of management of larger businesses in NSW, you need to be afraid of the NSW occupational health and safety laws. I've run small and medium businesses in NSW all my life. I was once proud to live in this state. I operate a labour hire business and we take work safety very seriously. We have a strong safety record in difficult industries. In 2000 we had an employee working at a company on a machine that pressed out metal caps for power poles. The machine malfunctioned, crushing four of our employee's fingers. We were shocked by the incident and co-operated fully in the investigation. We supported our employee. In the court case against me, the judge found the machine failure was totally beyond my control and impractical for me to prevent. However, I'm still criminally guilty and I fail to understand why. I've some questions for the Premier. If I don't own a machine or the property on which it sits, didn't make or design the machine nor have the capacity to direct its use or maintenance, how can I be held responsible when it fails? What sort of strange law holds me guilty for something I can't control? Mr Iemma, if I drove a car and the wheel fell off, causing an accident, would you convict me over something I could not control? If you did it would mean everyone who had a car accident would face automatic criminal prosecution. It's nonsense and illogical. I was convicted because Mr Iemma's OHS laws declare that, as soon as a work accident happens, the employer is automatically guilty whether there's fault or not. I was the labour hire employer of my injured worker. The technical wording of the NSW OHS Act says I'm guilty because I'm the employer. I did nothing wrong – I'd done everything a good employer must do in following safety procedures. In NSW under these OHS laws, you are denied a trial before jury and normal rights to appeal. No other state has these laws. Other states have sensible OHS laws that hold everyone responsible for what they reasonably and practically control. I'm happy to be held responsible under those circumstances and that's why I'm looking for business opportunities outside NSW. I'm angry. I've discovered that a labour hire company that had three of its employees killed in the Gretley mining tragedy in the Hunter Valley has not been prosecuted. The Government refuses to reveal why the directors of the labour hire company haven't been prosecuted. According to a recent report, the labour hire company, United Mining Support Services, was owned by an ALP-affiliated union. Are unions exempt from prosecution? What's happened to justice in this state? Mr Iemma undertook last year to change these laws but backed down at the last minute because NSW unions would not agree. Instead he pushed the issue off to another inquiry which will report after the March state election. I feel betrayed. There are plenty of other people in the same situation. We are honest but are technically criminals over occurrences we could not control. ALP politics created this. Will they fix it? I don't think so! * Tom Smith is managing director, DSC Managememt Man dies under submerged mowerJanuary 03, 2007 09:38am Article from: AAP A MAN was killed when he was pinned under a ride-on mower after it toppled into a dam in central-western NSW. Emergency personnel found the body of the 45-year-old man under the submerged mower in the dam at a factory in Oberon about 5.30pm (AEDT). A crane was used to hoist the mower out of the water before the man's body could be retrieved. Police believed the man got too close to the edge of the dam while he was mowing the grass and the machine fell in. | Subscribe to OHS News via Email | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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