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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Melbourne Victoria
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    Default Are we paranoid about safety in Australia?

    On a recent trip to Thailand I took the following. It made me think taht maybe we overreact to safety in Australia.

    Photo 1 is a bamboo scaffold. I know bamboo is strong and don't have a problem with it being used like this, but the connections look like rubber hose tightened like a tornequit

    Photo 2 - 4. High rise working. Not a problem to lean out over balconies without and harness. Not dangerous, as long as you don't fall. Photo 3 and 4 show a man standing on a plank. This is maybe 100 x 20 and most of us would use it as scrap for firewood

    Missed an oppurtunity to phtotgraph someone on a high overhang who was leaning over to weld about a foot below his level. No mask etc and barefeet, and raining.

    Photo 5 the start of formwork for a pour for a elevated beam. Uprioghts are logs with a T at teh top and one brace. The middle plank is for the base of the concrete beam. Teh other two are for the workers to stand on. Maybe 100 x 20 and looks like scrap


    ELECTRICAL !!!!

    All electrical connections in the country are twisted wire convered with electrical tape. Exposure to rain doesn;t weem to be a problem

    Photo 6 the roof line runs onto the exposed light. Any water could easily enter teh light. It was on and it was raining, and I had to duck to walk under

    Photo 7. Who needs teh "extra" casing on their light fititngs?

    Photo 8 There are only two colours of wire in Thailand, both are black. Everywhere there are masses of wires bundled together, some just above head height and many exposed ends. Not sure if these ends were live

    Photo 9. The tourist gets a harness. Teh guide doesn't. He just swings up and sits on eth lines to the canopy.

    Photo 10 The is a simple homemade extension for a market. just join wires as needed and hang down a power outlet every now and then.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    Emerald, QLD
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    0

    Default

    I don't think 'paranoid' is the right descriptor. WHS is an industry. If they aren't seen to be making changes, they will become redundant. One day it will come to the point where they cannot restrict us any further and so become redundant anyway. Why delay the inevitable I say!
    As to your indonesian mates - a bit far the other way - but then labour is expendible there and lawsuits rare
    .
    Updated 8th of February 2024

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Blue Mountains
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    0

    Default

    Im with Vern,

    I worked in an incident reducing project in a big corporation. The focus was not more safety gear but more awareness. We kicked big OH&S goals, particularly with manual handling. There are big bucks to be made supplying safety gear of all types. I had to have electrical leads verified 3 years in a row, on effing PC's! Told them to nick off, Ill wait till Workcover tells me reverify.

    Somewhere I have photos of a 3 story being built in Kathmandu with all bamboo scaffolding. Strong as (I wiggled it), cheap and culturally appropriate.


    Sebastiaan
    "We must never become callous. When we experience the conflicts ever more deeply we are living in truth. The quiet conscience is an invention of the devil." - Albert Schweizer

    My blog. http://theupanddownblog.blogspot.com

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2004
    Location
    Carine WA
    Age
    75
    Posts
    110

    Default

    Hi
    The focus was not more safety gear but more awareness.
    I think you would agree that a guy walking on a SINGLE plank two/three storeys up would be acutely aware of his surroundings. Much more aware than our "locals" with steel scaffolding, four/five planks with minimal gaps, side rails with mesh/material covered sides.

    Realisically, it's not that the Thai conditions are unsafe. The scaffolding is strong, the boards/planks are capable of holding the weight of a man/men performing their jobs.

    It could even be said that the Thai workers are more careful where they walk etc

    I had to install some wiring for ground floor switches. The ONLY way to do this was from directly above the switches and from the second storey roof (sans scaffold/harness). As the switches where on the outer wall I would sit on the roof, above the eaves area with my leg hanging down past the gutter (for comfort and balance).

    This is not something ill considered and I DO NOT recommend you follow/try my method. Au contraire, I was aware of what I was doing and paid attention to where I was. As you probably realise I do not have a problem with heights
    Kind Regards

    Peter

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Armadale
    Posts
    887

    Default

    this seems pretty irrisponsible thinking to me,
    accidents in the workplace often occur not because the injured party was unaware but because of co workers stupid carelessness.

    I worked 15 years at the claims end of comp and some of the attitudes of irrisponsible employers would make you weep, contantly blaiming workers their own cheapskate and slapdash practices.

    if a thai worker falls to their death on a slippery wet bamboo scaffold
    who feeds his kids.
    not the boss!

    I suggest some of you guys get a grip and research the deaths and serious injury that occurs in these places before driveling on

    Astrid

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    Pambula
    Age
    59
    Posts
    5,026

    Default

    I had to install some wiring for ground floor switches.
    Presumably, as I believe you're not a licensed electrician yourself, you were doing that under the direct supervision of a licensed contractor, and therefore he/she was responsible for the "work safe" practices on the site. If you had fallen to your death or disablement, he would most likely have been fined and his worker's compensation fund would have paid your bills.

    "I don't practice what I preach because I'm not the kind of person I'm preaching to."

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Broome West Aussie
    Age
    67
    Posts
    11

    Default

    Somewhere or other I have some pics of some of the most insane workpractices ever.
    1) a series of forklifts lifting each other... large one lifting next size down all the way to the top of their lift heights blokes in each forklift... top forks have pallet with bloke standing lifting boxes of and onto the staging... NOT one helmet harness in sight!

    2) a series of pics from a wharf incident... seems in this particular country dozers are delivered and driven off the back of low loaders without considering ramps rops or anything like helmets or other safety devices... first pic is of a worker getting aboard a D9... next of the D9 moving backwards driver looking forwards... third pic is of the D9 upside down at the back of the low loader...fourth pic is of a crane lifting the D9 off the ground... fifth is of the bloke... or what was left of him which given the weight of a D9 landing on his unprotected person wasnt much

    3 was an Aussie site where a worker was on top of a huge shed/workshop in the bush somewhere... no helmet no boots no harness... next shot was the bloke on the deck and people rushin toward him.

    4) was a worksite where the electical wiring was... can we say dodgy?... leads with bare wire plugs not fitting running through water and chemicals... blokes walking around without a care.

    Safety? what safety?... in the Asian countries life is cheep therefore unimportant to the business involved... in Aussie life is thought more highly of... by some... some I think just want to get a Darwin award

    There will always be unsafe worksites while ever workers work there without standing up and saying something or actually doing something to change unsafe work practices... there will always be idiots who do unsafe things for a variety of reasons... but at least Australia has been attempting to cut out unsafe workplaces and practices.

    Mining has to be one of the worst environments with some increadibly unsafe work environments and practices... but until the culture changes nothings going to improve... there is a culture of "tuff rough" mentality if you complain about an unsafe environment or practice or even activity you are automatically treated by contempt and derision by not only your workmates but also the heirachy until THAT changes nothing will change.
    Believe me there IS life beyond marriage!!! Relax breathe and smile learn to laugh again from the heart so it reaches the eyes!!


  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Armadale
    Posts
    887

    Default

    very well said dingo

    I,ve just this minuit farewelled two guys fitting blinds outside in blinding sunlight,
    stepladder too short (for most old houses I would imagine)
    No worries we'll just stand on the top platform, wielding heavy canvas and drill- oh hold the ladder mate, the grass is a bit uneven
    and if I fall its only 8 feet

    unbelievably stupid or maybe the boss wont spend $200 on a decent ladder and when the compo bills come in he'll wriggle and squirm and complain about unions.
    while the idiot off the ladder is in a back brace

    astrid

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Sydney
    Age
    67
    Posts
    53

    Default

    OHS laws can be cumbersome but if it wasn't for those laws we'd still be cutting asbestos sheeting with power saws, going deaf from noisy workplaces and dying in dozens (instead of ones and twos) in coal mines etc etc.
    They're a necessary evil. Could be better administered, yes, but better to fix them than have no laws at all..
    Sure, OHS laws add to the cost of producing things, which is part of the reason why Thai holidays and Chinese manufactured goods are so cheap, but the cost is passed on to the local workers in a fairly savage way.
    For example official figures show 1113 workers killed in coal mining accidents in China the first 3 months of this year. Translated to a country of Australia's popualtion, that would be equivalent to one coal miner dying every four days. And that's just the coal mines. (And the figures are the official ones.)
    As for Thailand, one construction sector death every 3 days and 8 hours. See http://www.ilo.org/public/english/re...sh/conth05.pdf

    Happy holidays,

    Gaz.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Perth
    Posts
    1,174

    Default

    I'd be much happier about OHS rules if they were not so readily used for non OHS reasons by bureaucrats, bludgers and lay abouts to hide behind. There also seems an over emphasis on learning rules, and not enough on real, in-depth understanding about why things happen as they do and applying plain old common sense. OHS rules and their application seem to be designed to keep people ignorant, and alive (or maybe it's ignorant people, alive). Relying on OHS alone won't always save your behind, except perhaps in court, but then again your'e gonna be pretty uncomfortable arriving in court without a behind.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Thailand
    Age
    63
    Posts
    90

    Default

    I've lived in Thailand for the past 2 years. Prior to that, I was a Facilities Manager for several years (in Sydney) & prior to that, I was an electrical engineer/electrician. I am Australian.

    I do believe that many Australians are paranoid about health & safety...Thais are not (I'll explain why directly).


    I have 2 sisters. We were brought up in a relatively small country area in NSW & were not "cotton wooled" in any way. As a matter of fact, our parents gave us free reign of almost anything but they made aware of the "possibilities" of "bad" things to us. As a consequence, we all seem to have grown up without any major problems (health, "common sense" etc).

    Strangely, one of my sisters took an inverse approach to raising her child. The kid has been "cotton wooled" but only partially. Already, the effects can be seen. He has little common sense with even the simplest of things & cannot rely on his own judgement. If he was any worse, he'd need instructions upon how to breath. He is 13 & is really smart at school.

    With other people whom I've known to have been "cotton wooled", the opposite seems to occur. They rebel in the worst possible way by taking the most extreme risks because they were never allowed take them when they were kids.

    In Thailand, things are quite different. Since there is little to no regulation of "law", people are ultimately left to be totally responsible for their own actions, as opposed to falling back on a law that takes the responsibility. So, if you walk around Thailand with your eyes & ears open, you will survive but if you expect a law to protect you, forget it. Also, most Thais are Buddhists, which means that death is actually not at all a bad thing. In the past year, 3 students from my college, have been killed in motorcycle accidents. All of them died because they didn't wear a helmet. Even though the whole college knew this, students still ride motorbikes without helmets. I don't mind at all...it is their body & it is up to them to decide what to do with it.
    These are a few of the many reasons why I came to Thailand...I was sick of not being able to be responsible for my actions. I was sick of the plethora of overzealous laws.

    There is a slight "balance" to this equation. As an example, there was a case of a boy (in Thailand) drowning. He drowned in a roadworks hole, which was about 2 metres deep. After some typical "wet season" rainfall, the hole filled with water as did the surrounding area, effectively "camouflaging" the hole. He simply walked into it & drowned. Safety barriers were nowhere to be found around or near the hole.

    I can clearly see 2 states of reaction. The Australian reaction is "over the top" & the Thai reaction is well & truly "under the top". If Thailand was smart (?), it could get the best of both worlds by comparing themselves to another country & not end up "over reacting" like Australia & other countries have done but still applying "sensible" safety regs.
    “I do not think there is any thrill that can go through the human heart like that felt by the inventor as he sees some creation of the brain unfolding to success... Such emotions make a man forget food, sleep, friends, love, everything.” - Nikola Tesla.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Perth
    Posts
    1,174

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by elkangorito View Post

    ...

    I can clearly see 2 states of reaction. The Australian reaction is "over the top" & the Thai reaction is well & truly "under the top". If Thailand was smart (?), it could get the best of both worlds by comparing themselves to another country & not end up "over reacting" like Australia & other countries have done but still applying "sensible" safety regs.
    ....
    Good post!

  13. #13
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Geraldton WA
    Age
    49
    Posts
    13

    Default

    I don't mind most of the regulations but what gets my is all the general safety inductions we have to do everytime some bureaucrat decide to re colour code his wallet. don't like that colour blue might make it a green card now what going to be next pink with purple poker dots card. I think I have done one of the generic courses at least six or seven time I am sure others have done more than that.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    May 2003
    Location
    Broome West Aussie
    Age
    67
    Posts
    11

    Default

    Actually I ran into this card crap the other week canetoad... Now a few years back in another incarnation I was a trainer career guidance peanut and one of the to me then strange things that the eastern staters that wandered into my office kept showing me was there among their tickets and licenses were these green blue or whatever flavored cards... now at that time here we didnt use such mongrel things but seems in the last few years they have become increadibly popular

    So I had an appointment with the rehab people for a "work assessment/trial/hardening" bullshyte thing set up by the insurer so I wandered down to this place and the bloke after asking what machinery experience I had and getting the whole underground surface mining thing says "yeah mate alright we dont use the marcsta mate wheres your blue card and abn?"

    so after looking at the dopey rehab sheila I said "Well mate number 1 I am not a business so I dont have a bloody need for an abn so dont have one... number 2 whats a blasted blue card when its at home?" so this bloke looks me over like Im some sort of demented chook on steroids that was gonna cause all manner of union strife on his site looked at the rehab sheila and said "Look I thought you said he had all the tickets?" she looks acusingly at me and said "well as I said on the phone its only for a worktrial/hardening to see if he can do the work" "Not here not unless he gets an abn and a blue card" and that as they say was that

    Now the dopey rehab sheila is demanding I get both... and Im telling her theres no way in hell Im getting either UNLESS the damned insurance company pays for the things... thing is I have no intent or interest in working on that site and as my knees snufued totally its highly unlikely Im going to ever operate mining or construction machinery again so why the bloody blue blazes she was trying to get me there I have no idea... suspicions yes... actual reasonings from them no.

    But this blue card thing... like the marcsta is a bloody crock of damned crap... see with the marcsta its irrelevent simply because EVERY SINGLE MINESITE you go to work at puts you through a pretty total induction process of their own... and the marcsta one is designed that NO ONE No matter how closely aligned for a darwin award they are how utterly thick they may be how totally brain dead they present they cannot fail to receive their marcsta ticket... an utter bloody crock
    Believe me there IS life beyond marriage!!! Relax breathe and smile learn to laugh again from the heart so it reaches the eyes!!


  15. #15
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Blue Mountains
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by astrid View Post
    this seems pretty irrisponsible thinking to me,
    accidents in the workplace often occur not because the injured party was unaware but because of co workers stupid carelessness.

    I worked 15 years at the claims end of comp and some of the attitudes of irrisponsible employers would make you weep, contantly blaiming workers their own cheapskate and slapdash practices.

    if a thai worker falls to their death on a slippery wet bamboo scaffold
    who feeds his kids.
    not the boss!

    I suggest some of you guys get a grip and research the deaths and serious injury that occurs in these places before driveling on

    Astrid
    Hi Astrid,

    Dont disagree, but having put in self insurance and seen the results the big gains are made by listening to the people doing the work, and not just adding layers of equipment and useless paperwork. Basics must be dealt with but there is a lot of B/S and gouging going on. There's good insurance money to be had!

    Totally agree "elkangorito". Our "Nanny" state has gone too far.

    Sebastiaan
    "We must never become callous. When we experience the conflicts ever more deeply we are living in truth. The quiet conscience is an invention of the devil." - Albert Schweizer

    My blog. http://theupanddownblog.blogspot.com

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