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John MacDonald: The dangers of tinkering with Health and Safety

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Tue, 3 Jun 2025, 1:02pm
(Photo / NZ Herald)
(Photo / NZ Herald)

John MacDonald: The dangers of tinkering with Health and Safety

Author
John MacDonald,
Publish Date
Tue, 3 Jun 2025, 1:02pm

If there鈥檚 anyone who shouldn't be told they can wind things back on the health and safety front, it鈥檚 a New Zealander.  

Because generally, we are absolute shockers when it comes to this sort of thing and our health and safety laws are the only thing standing between our 鈥渟he鈥檒l be right鈥 attitude and misery and tragedy.  

Especially when you consider that 鈥攅ven with the health and safety laws we have at the moment鈥 our workplace fatality rate is 60% higher than Australia鈥檚 and more than 500% higher than the UK鈥檚.  

So a perfect time, isn鈥檛 it, for us to be getting rid of what the Government says is WorkSafe's 鈥渟afety-at-all costs mentality鈥?  

Just in case you think I鈥檓 a health and safety freak, I鈥檓 not.   

But I鈥檓 also enough of a realist to know that, without these laws, more people would be going home at the end of the day injured or not going home at all.  

Another reason why us New Zealanders are the last people to be told we can go a bit easy on the old health and safety is that we have very short memories.  

I haven鈥檛 forgotten the 19th of November 2010, when the first Pike River explosion happened. I remember distinctly getting home from work that afternoon and all of us watching the live coverage.   

That was what set-in-train a huge overhaul of health and safety laws because, as we eventually discovered, the guy who ran the mine wasn鈥檛 the hero we all initially thought he was.  

Pike River was where it all started. And the government is setting out today to walk all over the progress that we鈥檝e made since then 鈥 apparently because we鈥檝e gone too far with it.    

But even though I鈥檓 just as capable as the next person of shaking my head at some of the things businesses and employers are required to do in the name of keeping people safe, I鈥檓 not happy about the screws being loosened.  

But what the Government has in its favour is that most people haven鈥檛 experienced the consequences of things going pear-shaped at work.  

That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 so easy to dismiss health and safety as an overreaction. But I bet if you have known someone who has lost their life at work or if you know someone who has been seriously injured at work, then you鈥檒l have a much more realistic view of things.  

The irony is we鈥檝e got the Government on one hand saying today that its crackdown on badly-behaved state housing tenants has worked  

But, on the other hand, it鈥檚 saying that it wants to be less heavy-handed on employers who don鈥檛 do everything they can to keep their people safe.  

Which is why the Minister of Workplace Relations and Safety, Brooke van Velden, wants WorkSafe to ditch what she鈥檚 calling its 鈥渁dversarial nature鈥 and to move from managing risk generally to critical risk.  

But what on earth does that mean?  

Do you know the difference between 鈥済eneral鈥 risk and 鈥渃ritical鈥 risk?   

Example: is an extension cord running across the floor somewhere at work a 鈥済eneral risk鈥 or a 鈥渃ritical risk鈥? The answer to that depends on the consequence.  

If the consequence of a power cable running across the floor in the office is just a bit of a nuisance and nothing else, then you could probably categorise it as a 鈥済eneral risk鈥.  

But if that cable lying across the floor means someone trips on it and they bang their head pretty hard on a wall and get some sort of brain bleed, then that becomes a 鈥渃ritical risk鈥, doesn鈥檛 it?  

See what I mean?  

The idea of taking the pedal off the metal and only taking 鈥渃ritical risks鈥 seriously probably sounds great to many of us. But dig a bit deeper or even think about it for a few minutes and you鈥檒l realise that it鈥檚 a huge mistake.  

It鈥檚 a bit like Trump coming in and saying that all this Paris climate change stuff is nonsense and suddenly you鈥檝e got people around the world saying, 鈥測eah yeah, enough of this climate change nonsense鈥.  

And the reason that鈥檚 happening is because people like Trump are giving people permission to go all climate change-sceptic on it.  

Which is exactly what the Government is doing with its loosening of the health and safety laws. It鈥檚 giving people permission to go easy on health and safety, which is the last thing us New Zealanders need when our default position is 鈥渟he鈥檒l be right鈥. It is a disaster waiting to happen, all over again. 

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