SUNDAY
MAIL :
ARTICLE
by Janet
Giles
2
March 2008
Imagine
losing a
limb.
Or your
child
becoming
a
paraplegic.
A loved
one
being
killed
on the
job.
In a
perfect
world
nobody
should
get
injured
or die
at work,
but
while
workers
continue
to be
asked to
do
dangerous
things
in
dangerous
workplaces,
work
injury
is a
fact of
life.
That's
why we
need a
good
system
that
compensates
workers
and
helps
them
recover
so they
can get
back to
work
quickly
and
safely.
As a
community
we have
relied
on the
union
movement
and the
Labor
party
for fair
safety
and
workers
compensation
laws
that
protect
the
rights
of
working
families.
We are
therefore
justifiably
outraged
that a
Labor
Premier,
Mike
Rann,
wants to
slash
the pay
of
injured
workers
by 20%
if they
are
still
hurt
after 13
weeks
and cut
off
support
completely
after
two and
a half
years.
He
argues
WorkCover
is in
financial
strife,
yet at
the same
time he
wants to
give
employers,
who are
responsible
for the
injuries
in the
first
place, a
financial
windfall
- lower
levy
payments.
Premier
Rann is
hurting
the
working
families
who
elected
him in
his
eagerness
to
please
the big
business
lobby.
It's too
reminiscent
of
WorkChoices
and
that's
why
unions
in SA
have
vowed to
campaign
against
these
laws,
just as
we did
for the
past
three
years in
the Your
Rights
at Work
Campaign.
Rann is
fooling
no-one
with
claims
that we
will
still
have the
best
scheme
in
Australia.
Next
he'll
echo
Howard's
rhetoric
and say
that
injured
workers
have
never
been
better
off!
Standing
up for
working
families
is our
job.
Mr Rann
is
ignoring
the
concerns
of
injured
workers
- but
well
ensure
he hears
their
voices
through
the
community.
We will
be
running
paid
advertising,
talking
to
people
in the
suburbs
and now
targeting
key
Labor
seats.
We want
members
of
Parliament
to face
their
own
constituents
and tell
them how
they
will
cope
with
their
mortgage
on 20%
less pay
and why
they
think it
is OK to
slash
workers
pay to
increase
business
profits.
Yes, we
agree
that the
financial
position
of
WorkCover
needs
improving,
but
Kevin
Foley
and
Martin
Hamilton-Smith
are both
using
scare
tactics
to push
their
own
agenda.
Economists
will
tell you
it's not
another
state
bank and
doesn't
affect
our AAA
rating.
The
Liberals
left eh
scheme
in a
mess in
2002 and
that's
why we
sat on
the
Board
for the
last 6
years to
help get
it back
on
track.
We
sacked
most of
the
senior
staff,
appointed
a new
CEO,
reviewed
all
WorkCover
operations,
reduced
legal
costs
and
brought
in a new
agent
with a
focus on
returning
people
to work.
It's now
on the
way to
being
fully
funded
by 2013
but too
many
people
are
still
not able
to get
back to
work
quickly
and
safely.
The Rann
plan is
to
starve
injured
workers
back to
work by
cutting
their
pay,
even if
they
haven't
recovered.
There
are
other
more
humane
ways to
achieving
the same
result.
In
WorkCover
there
are many
groups
who
contribute
to the
problem.
Our
ideas
include
:
-
Spot
fines
for
employers
with
unsafe
workplaces,
more
workplace
inspectors
with
stronger
powers,
and
a
stronger
focus
injury
prevention.
-
Strong
financial
penalties
for
employers
who
delay
claims.
-
Strong
financial
penalties
for
employers
who
refuse
to
take
injured
workers
back
to
work.
-
Financial
incentives
for
employers
who
are
willing
to
employ
other
people's
injured
workers.
-
Investment
in
the
re-training
of
injured
workers
in
areas
where
they
are
better
suited.
-
Establishing
a
special
priority
project
involving
all
stakeholders
that
focuses
on
those
currently
on
the
scheme
for
over
three
years.
-
A
WorkCover
Ombudsman
with
strong
powers
of
investigation
of
complaints
about
agents,
lawyers,
medical
and
rehabilitation
providers,
worker
and
employer
behaviour
when
it
works
against
safe
and
quick
return
to
work,
backed
up
with
penalties
for
all
these
groups
enshrined
in
the
law.
Our
biggest
fear is
that the
bully
boy
tactics
of Rann,
Foley
and
Conlon
will
ultimately
make the
system
worse as
they
push
through
a law
for
political
purposes
rather
than
listening
to those
who know
the
problems,
who have
constructive
solutions
to
WorkCover's
structural
challenges,
and are
genuinely
interested
in
helping
to get
people
back to
work
safely
and
fairly.