We must not leave workers behind on dust disease prevention

Safe Work Australia will meet on Thursday to decide whether to expand regulations protecting workers from dust diseases like silicosis beyond those working directly with engineered stone which is used in the manufacture of benchtops. It is essential that Safe Work Australia ensures that all workers are protected from deadly dust diseases.

Workers in general construction, quarrying, mining, and tunneling are exposed to damaging levels of silica and dust from which they are developing preventable dust diseases, yet there are currently no specific regulations to protect them.

Exposure to high quantities of silica causes lung cancer, silicosis, and autoimmune diseases like scleroderma. These diseases are preventable with adequate regulations.

Australian Unions have recommended that silica be regulated in a similar manner to lead; requiring health monitoring, information and training and informing job applicants of the risks associated with exposure and the risk control measures in place.

In parallel with these regulations, unions are also calling for a ban on the use of engineered stone with high silica content to be staged over three years.

Quotes attributable to ACTU Assistant Secretary Liam O’Brien:

“Health and safety regulations on deadly dust exposure need to cover workers facing significant risk of exposure in quarrying, mining, and tunneling who currently have limited protections.

“Workers across a range of industries are being diagnosed with lung cancer, silicosis, and autoimmune diseases like scleroderma that are all preventable with enforceable and clear regulations.

“It is a national shame that workers in Australia are again being diagnosed with silicosis. We must stop a new wave of workplace illness and death similar in scale to that caused by asbestos, but only if we act now to protect the workers who are at greatest risk.

“No worker must be left behind as we try to end preventable dust diseases.”

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