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News Release |
WORKCOVER
CURE LIES IN PREVENTION
10 January 2007
SA Unions has rejected suggestions by
the Motor Trade Association for its cuts to benefits paid to injured
workers.
SA Unions President Nick Thredgold
says such a move would not address concerns about the organisation's
financial liabilities.
"Reducing the rights of the injured
is simply problem shifting, not problem solving. If injured
workers aren't properly supported through WorkCover, they are going
to require help from elsewhere, such as the health system or the
social security system."
"The real key to improving
WorkCover's performance is to reduce injury rates. Fewer
injuries means fewer liabilities and fewer payouts."
"What we need to see is a commitment
from industry, including the Motor Trades, to improve workplace
safety standards. Better occupational health and safety
standards mean fewer workplace deaths and injuries, and less
pressure on WorkCover."
"If business was more prepared to
invest in safety, there would be a drop in injury rates, less demand
for compensation and an easing of the premiums business is required
to pay."
"The challenge is to industry to stop
looking for others to shoulder its responsibilities. It needs
to stop putting profit before safety and invest in creating safer
workplaces - not just in terms of valuing its employees, but also in
terms of saving itself the expense associated with growing injury
rates", Mr Thredgold says.
"Suggesting that workers should be
denied fair compensation for the employer's failure to provide a
safe working environment shows that some industries have a dark ages
mentality, where workers are seen as disposable."
"SA Unions believes South Australia
has the fairest worker's compensation system in the nation, with a
fair balance between the needs of workers and the needs of
employers. It is important to remember that the unfunded
liability carried by WorkCover is the worst case scenario if all
workers required payout all at once. It is not the present
reality. If industry will work with employees to reduce injury
rates it ultimately will benefit from reduced injury rates and a
reduction unfunded liability", Mr Thregold says.
"I understand the WorkCover Board is
actively looking at ways to improve its performance. Instead
of hindering that, industry could actually help by adopting the
adage that a modest investment in prevention is smarter than the
cost of a cure", he says.
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