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Need For Worker Safety Law

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September 11, 2019

What is the issue?

Major industrial accidents draw attention to the essentiality of stronger worker safety law.

How is occupational safety at present?

  • Recent notable industrial accidents include -
    1. deaths of four people, including a senior officer, in a fire at the Oil and Natural Gas Corporation gas facility in Navi Mumbai
    2. the tragedy that killed nearly two dozen people at a firecracker factory in Batala, Punjab
  • A safe work environment is a basic right and India’s recent decades of high growth should have ushered in a framework of guarantees.
  • But, unfortunately, successive governments have not felt it necessary to ratify many fundamental conventions of the International Labour Organization (ILO).
  • These cover organised and unorganised sector workers’ safety, including the Occupational Safety and Health Convention, 1981.
  • India’s record in promoting occupational and industrial safety remains weak even with years of robust economic growth.
  • Making work environments safer remains a low priority, although the productivity benefits of such investments have always been clear.
  • The consequences are frequently seen in the form of a large number of fatalities and injuries.
  • But despite these, in a market that has a steady supply of labour, policymakers tend to ignore the wider impact of such losses.

What are the concerns in this regard?

  • Such incidents make it imperative that the Central government abandon its disregard for dealing with industrial safety challenges.
  • The government should engage in serious reform but there is not much evidence of progressive moves.
  • The Occupational Safety, Health and Working Conditions Code, 2019 was introduced in the Lok Sabha in July 2019.
  • It aims to combine 13 existing laws relating to mines, factories, dock workers, building and construction, transport workers, inter-State migrant labour and so on.
  • However, it pays little attention to the sector-specific requirements of workers.
  • One of its major shortcomings is that formation of safety committees and appointment of safety officers is left to the discretion of State governments.
  • Evidently, the narrow stipulation on safety officers confines it to a small fraction of industries.
  • The ILO instruments cover several areas of activity that the recent occupational safety Code seeks to amalgamate.
  • But, the code comes without the systemic reform that is necessary to empower workers.

What should the priority be?

  • The Factories Act currently mandates the appointment of a bipartite committee in units that employ hazardous processes or substances.
  • This and such other provisions should certainly be retained in the new code.
  • It is essential, therefore, that the new Code is reworked to include the much-needed missing provisions.

 

Source: The Hindu

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