Every
country has a different requirement for reporting injuries to the pertinent
government safety organization. The failure to report injuries can have serious
consequences upon the aluminium company and the individual(s) responsible for
reporting these injuries. Here is a recent highlighting that somehow someway
government safety organizations always seem to know when a company is not
reporting incidents:
Labor
Standards Inspection Office in Japan reported that an aluminium company
employee (name omitted) did not report workers' accident incidents during the
aluminum processing work and was suspected of violating the Occupational Safety
and Health Law on February 9, with (company name) an aluminum product
manufacturing company, and the employee in charge was sent for documentation.
In
July last year, a male employee in his 20s working at the aluminium factory got
burned to his left wrist while working on melting aluminum, and he got injured
requiring a closure of four days or more requiring reporting, the location did
not report promptly.
According
to the Labor Department office, the company explained that "Because some
male employees said they want their injuries to be silent, some bosses hid
them."
We pray that the worker(s) recovered fully from their injury. We
hope that the company makes the necessary changes to ensure that reporting is
done. One company has a unique way of ensuring reporting. This company uses
many factors (number of employees, hazards, production volumes, etc.) to
estimate how many incidents and near misses a plant should have. If a plant is
underreporting their headquarters knows and make the necessary changes
(replacing the plant manager).
We recall walking into one casthouse and observing solidified metal
on the ceiling of the facility (15 meters above). The casthouse manager stated
that they never had a molten metal explosion. Either he was not telling the
truth or his workers were not reporting the explosion. Or a combination of
both.
We chose not to name the company because in our experience this was
not an isolated incident. Workers do not report incidents for mainly one reason
only. FEAR. They fear retribution for reporting an incident. This fear is real.
We have known several incidents where the plant management made it well known
that they did not want incidents reported. In the most grievous incidents we
have heard of plant managers covering up incidents that resulted in injuries or
fatalities.
When we speak to workers we explain the importance of reporting
injuries. Our message is simple “you have to report near misses and incidents!”.
The Aluminium Times Magazine had an article about the importance of
reporting incidents. It can be downloaded here.
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