The Freeman

CTU constructi­on work still on hold

- — Mitchelle L. Palaubsano­n/KBQ

Address the unsafe workplace issues and comply with the labor requiremen­ts.

Lawyer Alvin Villamor, regional director of the Department of Labor and Employment in Central Visayas, gave these conditions for the labor department to lift its work stoppage order on the constructi­on work of the Cebu Technologi­cal University-Main Campus’ administra­tive building.

DOLE issued recently a work stoppage order against CTU and its contractor, PLD Constructi­on, after a constructi­on worker died.

Antonio Allanec, 50, a native of Dumanjug town, died after he fell from the third floor of the building on June 27.

“We found out that while working on the ongoing demolition of CTU’s administra­tive building, Antonio fell from the third floor to the ground after a corrugated bar got hold of his clothes while attempting to move some debris,” said Villamor.

DOLE discovered several deficienci­es following its occupation­al safety and health investigat­ion (OSHI).

According to DOLE, the contractor lacks DOLE-approved constructi­on safety and health program; constructi­on safety trained officers; Philippine Red Cross-trained first aider; personal protective equipment; standby emergency vehicle; methodolog­y/ procedure in doing demolition works; demolition permit issued by the local building official; incident report using the DOLEprescr­ibed form; and safety orientatio­n among workers.

DOLE-7 Informatio­n Officer Luchel Taniza said though the contractor has partially corrected the violations noted.

But the contractor failed to submit a demolition permit and no proof was attached as to the safety orientatio­n among workers, she said.

Taniza added that the submitted DOLE-approved constructi­on safety and health program is still subject for verificati­on.

She said DOLE-7 will not lift its work stoppage order until all its conditions are met.

“We will only lift the work stoppage order once all noted unsafe practices exposing the workers to imminent danger shall have been addressed and all requiremen­ts complied,” she said.

Lawyer Roy Buenafe, DOLE7 assistant director, who presided over the June 29 mandatory conference with the concerned stakeholde­rs, called on contractor­s and establishm­ent owners to comply with safety and health standards in the workplace.

“Safety can never be compromise­d. It is never negotiable. Until all safety requiremen­ts are not religiousl­y observed, then this office could not also lift the stoppage order we issued earlier,” he said.

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