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BY
KEVA LIGHTBOURNE
Guardian Staff Reporter
July 28th. 2000
Employees
throughout the country were urged to take care to minimize risk to
their health and safety and warned not to interfere with any safety
precautions that are a part of the workplace, as debate on the Health
and Safety Bill got underway in the House of Assembly Thursday.
Minister
of Commerce and Agricultural Industry Theresa Moxey-Ingraham
introduced the Bill, which is the government’s attempt to provide
for workers a minimum protection package guaranteed to ensure their
health and, safety in the workplace.
Contravention
of this Act can result in a $5,000 fine, Moxey-Ingraham said.
The
Health and Safety Bill is the third of five controversial Bills to be
introduced in Parliament in recent weeks. The Employment Bill and the
Minimum Wages Bill have already been debated.
Addressing
her colleagues Moxey-Ingraham said "we can not expect to carry
our country any further forward with the kind of casual disregard that
we have traditionally displayed toward health and safety in the
workplace and the health and safety of our workers.”
She
said much of what the government is attempting to do in this Act will
have to be done in concert with a number of codes that presently
exist, with a number of pieces of legislation passed recently with
regard to the operation of certain facilities.
However,
Moxey-Ingraham said there is much more that needs to be done.
She
said there is a need for greater awareness and a greater activism on
the part of the consumers of the Bahamas.
"We
are lax when it comes to consumer advocacy and unfortunately, it seems
that for the most part we focus our consumer advocacy on whether
something cost $2 or $2.50 as opposed to whether it is safe,”
Moxey-Ingraham said.
"Whether
it is something that we want to have on our shelves; whether it is
something we want to have within our boundaries, or whether we are
being dumped upon by the industrialized countries of the world giving
us chemicals, substances and equipment that are substandard in their
own jurisdictions or whether we are allowing ourselves in some
instances to become a sick people because of the way we approach our
work, Moxey-Ingraham said.
Under
the new Act, the minister responsible can designate public as health
and safety inspectors. These inspectors may inspect any premises other
than private dwellings and they may take police officers with them for
the purpose of execution of their duties or any other legally
authorized persons with them, and they may take any equipment
necessary to a work place in its attempt to determine whether or not
the workplace is being operated in a safe and healthy manner.
Once
an inspector has entered the workplace, he may direct that matters be
left undisturbed. He may take measurements, photocopies and other such
recordings necessary for his investigations. He may also take samples
or cause a dangerous article or substance to be dismantled and tested.
The
inspector may seize any article or a substance or detain it for
examination or to ensure that particular substance is not tampered
with or he can seize it to hold it for evidence for further
investigations.
The
inspector may also call for the records and any other data of the
establishment; he may require the cooperation of the person
responsible in an establishment (not necessarily the owner because he
may not be there).
An
inspector when calling for testing, examination, etc. will do so in
the presence of a responsible person in the organization at that time.
The health and safety inspector may issue two kinds of notice - the
Prohibition Notice and Improvement Notice.
When
an inspector enters a premise and has determine that something has
gone wrong he may issue an Improvement Notice and require the person
to remedy the situation in a specified time.
The
Prohibition Notice can actually close down an establishment at any
particular time. The inspector may serve a Prohibition Notice if he is
of the opinion that serious risk or injury may result from the
activity continuing. With this notice the inspector has to state his
opinion, specify the matters he is particularly concerned about and
must also direct that the specific activity must not be carried out by
the person to whom he is serving the notice any further until remedies
have been made.
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