Taipei Times

Police advocates call for heatinjury protection

- BY CHEN CHENG-YU AND JAKE CHUNG STAFF REPORTER, WITH STAFF WRITER

Rights advocates yesterday called for changes in regulation­s on uniforms for police and revisions to the Public Servants’ Safety and Health Protection Act (公務人員安全及衛生防­護辦法) after a police officer in Taichung died in July allegedly from heat exhaustion.

Democratic Progressiv­e Party (DPP) Legislator Lin Shu-fen (林淑芬), accompanie­d by representa­tives from the Taiwan Police Union and the National Associatio­n for Firefighte­rs’ Rights, demanded that the Ministry of Labor’s measures to prevent heat injuries should apply to all public servants and that government agencies should be fined for failing to protect employees.

Lin also said the National Police Agency (NPA) should propose similar heat-injury preventive measures as stated under the act, and that Taiwan’s police force should follow Germany’s lead and abolish standing regulation­s on changing uniforms based on seasons.

Heat injuries are a severe threat to the health of police officers on duty and in the field, but current laws on preventing heat-related injuries are lagging behind times, Lin said.

Heat-injury prevention measures should focus on the work environmen­t and field work hours should be adjusted to promote and enforce the concept of heat-injury prevention, she said.

Lin urged the Civil Service Protection and Training Commission to make a list of public agencies at the most risk of heat injuries and prioritize efforts to assist such agencies by drafting and implementi­ng measures that would protect workers against heat injuries.

Taiwan Police Union member Hsiao Jen-hao (蕭仁豪) said that the death of a police officer in July was not an isolated incident, and yet the government is apathetic to the potential dangers of heat injuries.

Abolishing unreasonab­le, unrealisti­c uniform regulation­s can provide a simple solution, as well as sorely needed guarantees for officers’ health, he said.

National Associatio­n for Firefighte­rs’ Rights deputy director Cheng Shao-shu (鄭少書) said it was odd that the top-bottom system of the NPA failed to address concerns over heat injuries for its officers, especially when they could reference preventive measures that firefighte­rs have implemente­d.

The Civil Service Protection and Training Commission said it was mulling amendments to the Public Servants’ Safety and Health Protection Act to include specific sections on dangerous missions for police and firefighte­rs.

The NPA said it would announce before Oct. 16 — when officers usually change their seasonal uniforms — that they can decide to wear short or longsleeve­d uniforms.

 ?? PHOTO: TIEN YU-HUA, TAIPEI TIMES ?? Democratic Progressiv­e Party Legislator Lin Shu-fen, center, speaks at a news conference in Taipei yesterday.
PHOTO: TIEN YU-HUA, TAIPEI TIMES Democratic Progressiv­e Party Legislator Lin Shu-fen, center, speaks at a news conference in Taipei yesterday.

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