Call for inquiry into ‘systemic’ workplace bullying
Advocate calls on Government to launch inquiry into ‘systemic’ workplace bullying
14 May 2017
Workplace bullying in New Zealand is at an
epidemic level and the Government is doing nothing about it,
according to CultureSafe NZ director Allan Halse.
Halse,
who has advocated for hundreds of victims of workplace
bullying, is calling on the Minister of Workplace Relations
and Safety Michael Woodhouse to launch an inquiry into
“systemic” workplace bullying.
His call for an
inquiry comes after Halse advocated for the woman at the
centre of stories on Stuff.co.nz andNZHerald.co.nz today that outline
allegations of bullying, racism and disrespect for bodies at
Auckland City Hospital’s mortuary.
Halse wrote to
Woodhouse in July 2015 outlining his concerns about serious
deficiencies of the application and interpretation of the
Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992 and its
relationship to workplace bullying.
“That Act was
strengthened by the Health and Safety at Work Act 2015 which
took effect last year. The day it took effect top lawyer Mai
Chen said in a NZ Herald article that there is now
legal obligation on the employer to provide a safe working
environment and that includes psychological and
physiological harm as well as physical harm.”
But Halse
says nothing came of his contact with Woodhouse or with the
Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment. And he says
he sees employers continuing to provide unsafe working
environments.
“I met with MBIE and WorkSafe about my
concerns, but nothing has changed.
“Workplace bullying
is a health and safety issue but the Employment Relations
Authority, being a civil jurisdiction, can’t rule on the
Health and Safety Act so there really is no authoritative
body that can impart justice for the victims of workplace
bullying.”
Halse said a 20091 study showed the almost
one if five workers had experienced workplace
bullying.
“Why aren’t our politicians and our unions
interested in helping fix this culture of workplace
bullying? It is systemic across all of New Zealand. It’s
high time that our politicians started taking some action on
this issue.”
Halse acted for mortuary worker Mandy
Kelly who made a formal complaint about her treatment in the
workplace. She has since quit her job and returned to her UK
home.
NZME and Fairfax have today reported that a
top-level inquiry by WorkSafe is now under way into
allegations of bullying and concerns about work practices,
including the treatment of bodies, at Auckland City
Hospital's mortuary.
“Every single day I see how
workplace bullying impacts on people… on their physical
and mental health. It destroys them. And it has to
stop.
“Not only does workplace bullying impact hundreds
of people and their families, it also has far-reaching
implications on our economy. It impacts our health system,
our productivity as a country.
“This should absolutely
be an election issue and I’m calling on the Michael
Woodhouse to get his head out of the sand and finally
address workplace bullying in this country by launching an
inquiry into how far-reaching it is, the impacts of it on
our economy and to examine the failings of our justice
system in addressing workplace bullying head on.”
1http://www.massey.ac.nz/massey/fms//Massey%20News/2010/04/docs/Bentley-et-al-report.pdf