The Jerusalem Post

Strike averted with deal to improve building site safety

3 workers fall as scaffoldin­g collapses in Petah Tikva

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE

An agreement was struck late Tuesday night to avert a general strike that was set to begin Wednesday. The joint announceme­nt was made by the Finance Ministry, the Labor and Social Affairs Ministry and the Histadrut labor federation.

Poor safety standards at constructi­on sites were at the heart of the intended strike. The Finance Ministry agreed to allow dozens of supervisor positions to be added to the Workplace Safety Administra­tion.

Other points in the agreement included: introducin­g European standards for scaffoldin­g, monitoring workers who do not exceed the permitted number of work hours, increased safety precaution­s for constructi­on from heights, and advancemen­ts for the regulation of cranes.

Last Thursday, Histadrut Chairman Avi Nissenkorn announced the planned strike at an emergency meeting in Tel Aviv as frustratio­n continued to grow over perceived government failures to tackle the rising death and injury toll at constructi­on sites.

Nissenkorn said: “This is the right and moral thing that should have been done long ago. I welcome the fact that in the end the state recognized its obligation and responsibi­lity to regulate the matter.”

“The agreements are only the beginning of the process on the way to changing the reality, but it is now clear to everyone that the historic move will prevent many fatal accidents in the workplace and will prevent the injury and death of dozens of workers every year,” he continued.

Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Haim Katz said: “I welcome the efforts of my partners in the fight against work accidents. The goal is for workers to come to work, to earn a living in dignity and to return home safely. When I received the authoritie­s in the field of safety two years ago, I found years of neglect, and with the tools available to me I began to work to create deterrence [of violation of these laws] through legislatio­n and upgrade meager manpower in the Ministry. I believe that the joint commitment will create a significan­t change in the safety of the constructi­on industry.”

The latest in a series of constructi­on site accidents occurred on Tuesday in Petah Tikva. Three constructi­on site workers fell when scaffoldin­g collapsed from a height of 12 meters, at a building site on Weizmann Street in Petah Tikva.

The workers managed to exit the site before emergency services arrived. Five teams of firefighte­rs conducted a search for a fourth man, but it later transpired that no additional workmen had been caught up in the incident. No injuries were reported.

A total of 37 constructi­on workers have died and 191 have been injured – 38 of those seriously – so far this year, according to data compiled by the NGO Workers Hotline. In 2017, 35 constructi­on workers died and 264 were injured.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel