Deaths in construction industry in Malaysia is not only high but is rising. The fault is also on the government - for failure in enforcement or inadequate law to increase safety of workers.
“The Malaysian construction industry is killing its workforce at a rate which is approximately 10 times higher than that in the United Kingdom.”... Between 2001 and 2016, the fatal accident rate increased from 10.7 to 12.8, a rise of 20 per cent. The picture is different in the UK. There, the fatal accident rate in the construction industry over the same period dropped from 4.9 to 1.3, a slide of 70 per cent.The statistics for 2018 — the latest figures available — aren’t pretty for us either. According to the Department Of Occupational Safety and Health (DOSH),there were 169 fatalities and 3,911 accidents in that year.
Industrial accidents impact directly on all Malaysians - it is tax payer's monies that deal with the problems be it the hospitalization, rehabilitation, welfare and sustenance of the livelihood of the affected worker and their family. A serious injury and death also has a direct impact on the families, including children of the affected worker(or deceased worker).
The HR Minister does well to extend social security protection to more workers including the self-employed - BUT at the end of the day prevention is always better than cure.
The Ministry does not have enough personnel or money to do regular inspection and enforcement of the law - thus PH government must provide more monies to ensure this problem is solved. The punishment for non-compliance of the law must also be INCREASED, and should include imprisonment of Developers, Contractors, Architects, etc ... Taking bribes by enforcement personnel, meant to ensure safe working environment for workers and laws are complied with, should be higher because their 'corruption' resulted in injury and deaths.
It is also not only workers - but also people living in the area. Poisonous gasses and 'illegal' disposal of waste by factories are just some of other problems that arise by reason of lack of inspection and enforcement.
Ordinary shop owners complain the excessive visits by enforcement officers to their premises - looking for the 'smallest' reason to threaten legal action - MAYBE, these resources should be used for the construction industry and factories?
MINIMUM WAGE - For the 3D jobs, the jobs that many Malaysians shun, should maybe be INCREASED to attract more Malaysian workers - In India, the minimum wages for such jobs are higher...
NST Leader: Building death
THERE
is something rotten in the state of safety in the construction
industry. The Taman Desa building collapse last Friday is a sign of a
broader problem. But we can’t say we weren’t warned.
The
Construction Industry Development Board of Malaysia (CIDB) in its 2018
report set off the alarm thus: “The Malaysian construction industry is
killing its workforce at a rate which is approximately 10 times higher
than that in the United Kingdom.”
This isn’t a surprise.
Between
2001 and 2016, the fatal accident rate increased from 10.7 to 12.8, a
rise of 20 per cent. The picture is different in the UK. There, the
fatal accident rate in the construction industry over the same period
dropped from 4.9 to 1.3, a slide of 70 per cent.
The
statistics for 2018 — the latest figures available — aren’t pretty for
us either. According to the Department Of Occupational Safety and Health
(DOSH),there were 169 fatalities and 3,911 accidents in that year.
And the numbers have been growing from bad to worse. There is a reason to be worried.
The
construction industry employs an estimated 1.2 million workers or close
to 10 per cent of Malaysia’s workforce. Plus, it is a major contributor
to our economy. Last year, the industry was worth approximately RM146
billion.
The construction industry is too important to be
left to its own devices. What ails the construction industry? CIDB
provides some insights. The industry is constructed around cheap,
unskilled labour.
Safety is the least of its concern. If
safety does enter into the equation at all, it is all on the
contractors’ account. In the end, the workers pay with their lives and
limbs.
And most of them are migrant workers, with no one taking interest in their welfare.
The
developers and the designers watch from afar when something goes wrong,
as it did in Taman Desa. Thankfully, no one was killed.
Unsurprisingly, the same site saw the collapse of a crane two years ago. There have been other complaints against the developer.
It
is clear that developers and designers need to play a more active role
in the construction of the building. To put it bluntly, leaving
everything to the contractors is being irresponsible.
This
needs to change. Developers, for example, can take charge of the site by
better managing it in coordination with contractors. Designers, too,
can design out significant number of risks that cause accidents and
fatalities.
CIDB quotes a UK study that shows how this can
be done. According to the study, close to two-thirds of fatalities at
the construction sites could have been designed out.
To
avoid such opting out, laws must make mandatory what is voluntary.
Today, the industry has too many choices as evidenced by the voluntary
guidelines in the construction industry book.
Concerned about the compliance costs, the construction industry chooses not to adhere.
Economics
always trumps safety. Health, safety and environment matters are too
critical for the industry to be made an option. Having enacted them
thus, such laws must be enforced.
But there is a problem.
DOSH
just doesn’t have the numbers to inspect all the construction sites in
the country. In the process, medium-to-small projects are given a pass.
This must change. One death is one too many. - New Straits Times, 17/2/2020
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