Mass panicking is the real virus
Readers around New Zealand may have seen the impact of the panic themselves, as shoppers stocked up on tissues, toilet paper, soap and canned goods.
This panic has no doubt spread to businesses. The scale and spread of the disease has certainly cast the need for business continuity plans into the spotlight, particularly given the health and safety obligations placed on employers in legislation and common law.
There are a number of ways that the virus has impacted on businesses’ operations.
One key element of the impact is the reliance of many businesses on China. Many New Zealand universities have called on the Government to make exemptions to the travel bans on China to allow international students to study here. Victoria University has told the media that it was working through a redundancy process to address the impact on the university.
Another element of the impact is the uncertainty created by the constantly evolving situation.
The conference for the World Organisation of Family Doctors, which was due to be held in Auckland late next month, was recently postponed. The board members made the decision based on the uncertainty created by coronavirus, explaining that the organisers ‘‘couldn’t responsibly have so many primary care professionals out of circulation in late April, even for a short time, in light of the evolving situation with Covid-19.’’
Now the virus has reached
New Zealand, businesses can be severely impacted by widespread isolation of their staff, or worse, widespread sickness.
Some businesses have begun to implement plans for situations where a large proportion of the staff were forced to work from home – either for isolation purposes or as a result of a general office closure. For example, about 200 staff of the Bay of Plenty Regional Council worked from home on Wednesday last week to test how the organisation would respond if coronavirus hit the region.
Consider your own workplace. If you contracted the disease tomorrow, would you be able to continue working? Has your employer set up processes for that? Ask them.
Or if you manage staff – have you considered how you would respond to this issue?
The matter isn’t as simple as just giving staff access to the company’s systems from their home. The employer’s health and safety obligations apply regardless of where the employee is working, and given the circumstances, the employer would need to ensure it was monitoring and actively managing hazards that could emerge for employees working from home.
We don’t anticipate Worksafe focusing on the penal provisions of the Health and Safety at Work Act. It is more likely that Worksafe will concentrate on their ability to help and guide employers to cope with this unexpected and dramatic outbreak.
In fact, Worksafe policies provide for an expectation that a lower level of enforcement will be appropriate in situations where there is very little information or specific guidance available to assist the duty holder to manage risks effectively.
We are blessed in New Zealand with an abundance of sound advice, with regular updates and guidance being released by Worksafe, Ministry of Health and MFAT, for travellers. Employers, and society generally, should heed the advice from these organisations. To this end, it’s a good idea to have clear policies or practices in place in advance, guided by the official information, to both prevent and address contracting the virus.
It’s a timely reminder of the consequences of globalisation and the need to look ahead. Perhaps a bit more foresight and preparation could have stemmed the panic currently seizing New Zealand.
The panic about coronavirus is almost worse than the virus itself. We are not living in London in 1350 trying to survive the Black Plague. The virus is undoubtedly of concern, but the best approach is to be prepared, follow official advice, and not to panic.
Peter Cullen is a partner at Cullen – the Employment Law Firm. He can be contacted at peter@cullenlaw.co.nz