AMWU members joined thousands of other workers in protests around Australia on Tuesday demanding that new national workplace laws do not reduce existing health and safety rights and protections for Australian workers.
AMWU members can access a petition and campaign information for your workplace here.
The national action coincided with the release of a poll that shows eight out of ten Australians (78%) believe employers should do more to protect the health and safety of their workers, even if it means more costs or red tape for their business.
AMWU National Secretary Dave Oliver said it was clear the State, Territory and Federal Governments were not doing enough to consult workers on proposed changes to health and safety laws.
The national poll of 1,013 respondents was conducted by Essential Research between the 25th and 30th of August. It found nearly seven out of ten workers (67%) are not aware that the governments are working together to standardise the nation’s occupational health and safety laws.
AMWU Health and Safety Officer Deb Vallance said unions are concerned the proposed new laws will reduce the existing rights and protections for all workers in Australia.
“The changes will reduce the power of employees while giving greater power to employers, but the poll shows the Australian public don’t want workplace safety rights undermined.”
“It is essential that the Federal Government does not cave in to pressure from major employers and business lobby groups on this fundamental issue for workers.”
The poll shows there is significant support in the Australian community for stronger rights and protections for workers and an ongoing role for unions in checking workplaces where employees are worried they are in danger.
Eighty one per cent of those surveyed agreed workers should have the right to call in help from a union to check on health and safety issues regardless of their employer’s approval.
“There is also strong public resistance to moves by employers to deny injured workers the right to prosecute employers under workplace health and safety laws,” said Ms Vallance.
Seven out of ten Australians (69%) believe that injured workers should be able to take their employer to court under workplace health and safety laws.
“More, not less, needs to be done to reduce the cost to society of workplace illness, injury and death and that must start with best-practice national OHS laws,” she said.
Mr Oliver said the Federal Government was elected on a commitment to protect the rights of working people.
“Any reduction of health and safety in the workplace would breach that commitment and undermine improvements in other areas of Federal IR laws to strengthen workers’ rights,” he said.