• Bruce Tollan
    32
    I hope everyone is coping well under lock down.
    I'm working on a return to work risk assessment for decision making guidance for our work place after the lock down is over. I would be interested to get control measure feed back from the forum. Our organisation has multiple sites in New Zealand and Australia. We have manufacturing workshops, logistics, offices and public access commercial sales warehouses.
  • Bruce Tollan
    32
    I have a hypothetical question. If someone contracts a virus at work is it in breach of the HSAW act?
  • Andrew
    387
    I have done a thread on current risk assessment based on community exposure. From there you can adjust exposure rates to near zero by the time we return to work.
  • Craig Marriott
    206
    Not necessarily. If you are assessing the risks, putting in proportionate controls to the best of your knowledge, monitoring them etc then probably not. If you tell your worker to come in even though they tell you they're sick and then put them in close proximity to each other with no other protection, then probably yes. If the virus is ebola, the controls would have to be way more rigid than if it's the common cold.
    The Act does not require absolute prevention of every possible consequence, hence 'so far as is reasonably practicable'
  • Aaron Marshall
    117

    One thing to take into account, is that the restrictions will likely be lifted on a regional basis, so some sites will be open before others, and this may affect your supply chain risks, or put normally quiet sites under more strain than they usually have. Coming out of lockdown is potentially more troublesome than being in lockdown - the uncertainty returns.
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If you are interested in workplace health & safety in New Zealand, then this is the discussion forum for you.