Category Archives: 2024 Europe

Germany: Am 28. Das diesjährige Motto: “Lass Dich nicht verbrennen, wenn Hitze zur Qual wird”.

carsten burckhardt

Die Industriegewerkschaft Bauen-Agrar-Umwelt (IG BAU) ruft alle Beschäftigten dazu auf, der Menschen zu gedenken, die bei der Arbeit schwer erkrankt oder gar ums Leben gekommen sind. Auch wenn Wochenende ist – am internationalen Workers’ Memorial Day, dem 28. April, sollten alle Beschäftigten um 12 Uhr eine Gedenkminute einlegen. Das diesjährige Motto lautet “Lass Dich nicht verbrennen, wenn die Hitze zur Qual wird”.

“Langanhaltende Hitze, Starkregen, Unwetter und anderes mehr, gerade auch im Sommer ist der menschengemachte Klimawandel mittlerweile deutlich spürbar”, sagt IG BAU-Vorstandsmitglied Carsten Burckhardt. Deshalb müssten sich alle die, die draußen arbeiten, wie beispielsweise Dachdecker, Maurer oder Tiefbauer aber auch Gärtner, Forstleute und viele andere mehr, besonders schützen. Vor allem vor der intensiven UV-Strahlung und Hitze. Schwindel, Übelkeit, Herz-Kreislaufprobleme bis hin zum weißen Hautkrebs, mittlerweile die bei der Berufsgenossenschaft Bau zweithäufigste angezeigte Berufskrankheit, können für alle, die zu lange unter der sengenden Sonne gearbeitet haben, die Folge sein. “Sollte das Thermometer gar bis zur 40 Grad-Markierung hochgehen, muss die Arbeit eingestellt werden. Das ist für niemanden für längere Zeit zumutbar”, so der Gewerkschafter. Denkbar sei hier beispielsweise, wenn dies möglich ist, die Arbeitszeiten in die frühen Morgen- oder späten Abendstunden zu verlegen. “Unter dem Strich brauchen die klimabedingten Extremwetterlagen eine zeitgemäße Antwort, deshalb sollte für Menschen, die draußen arbeiten, künftig eine Kurzarbeiterregelung gelten, wie sie sich schon im Winter bei Kälte und Schnee bewährt hat.” Für Burckhardt ist nicht nur das Gedenken an die Verstorbenen wichtig, “wir kämpfen auch für die Gesunderhaltung der heute Beschäftigten.”

Im Jahr 1984 rief die kanadische Gewerkschaft für Angestellte im öffentlichen Dienst erstmals dazu auf, der im Arbeitsleben verstorbenen Kolleginnen und Kollegen zu gedenken. Seither wird jeweils am 28. April dieser Gedenktag in vielen Ländern weltweit begangen. In Deutschland haben im Jahr 2011 erstmals der DGB und die IG BAU dazu aufgerufen.

Bundesweit gedenkt die IG BAU der Opfer von Arbeitsunfällen und Berufskrankheiten mit einem ökumenischen Gottesdienst

am Sonntag, 28. April, 14.30 Uhr,
in der Hauptkirche Sankt Michaelis,
Englische Planke, Hamburg.

Mit dabei sind Carsten Burckhardt, André Grundmann, Leiter der IG BAU-Region Nord, Alexander Röder, Hauptpastor der Hauptkirche St. Michaelis, sowie Thorsten Weber, Pfarrer der Domkirche Sankt Marien

Statements von Bundesarbeitsminister Hubertus Heil (SPD) sowie von Carsten Burckhardt hat die Baugewerkschaft im Video-Format zusammengefasst.

Albania: 28 April – World Day of Safety and Health at Work – KSSH- CTUA

The Confederation of Trade Unions of Albania (KSSH- CTUA) has announced plans for International Workers’ Memorial Day:
In preparation for this day, on April 26 at 10:00 a.m., on Friday at the Tirana International Hotel, the National Conference is organized with the participation of all members of its General Assembly and leaders and activists of all levels and professions.
Every day, more and more jobs and workers are being threatened by climate change and biological hazards. These phenomena are seriously endangering the health of workers and endangering jobs every day.
The workers of various chemical industries, manufacturing and trading of industrial products, agriculture, fishing, animal husbandry, construction, transport and telecommunications, postal deliveries, delivery, are exposed and threatened not only by biological risks and heat but also from storms, hurricanes, floods, storms, lightning, tornadoes, fires, and strong winds are a permanent risk for workplaces and for the health and safety of workers.
It is therefore necessary and imperative for Unions to demand stronger and safer policies and practices to protect workers from the dangerous impacts of climate and biological change.
Join KSSH to ensure decent, healthy and safe work.!

Italy: CGIL and UIL hold national strike protesting deaths at work

In Italy BWI affiliates Cgil and UIL held a national strike on 11 April  against deaths at work. The action lasted four hours for all private sectors and eight hours for construction workers. Zero deaths at work, a fair tax reform and a new social business model were the three objectives on which the strike is based.

Ukraine: The construction workers’ union of Ukraine will mark 28 April with training and resources – PROFBUD

The construction workers’ union of Ukraine, PROFBUD, will mark International Workers’ Memorial Day in Ukraine with asbestos awareness training. PROFBUD has also announced BWI 28 April materials and booklets will be translated translated into Ukrainian.

PROFBUD webpages: http://www.profbud.org.ua/

Netherlands: FNV announces multiple activities to mark 28 April

Fnv - homeFNV has announced a number of 28 April activities:

  • FNV action call for 28th of April
  • Flag to fly at half mast on TU building
  • Commemoration symposium
  • Wreath laying

 

Turkey: Safety and health building for forest workers – TARIM ORMAN-IS

Porto

BWI affiliate TARIM ORMAN-IS will hold a capacity building national training session to train union workers and representatives as occupational safety and health reporters/auditors at forest workplaces.

UK: Hundreds of union reps will inspect workplace buildings for safety this week

Wednesday 24 April 2024

Hundreds of union reps will inspect workplace buildings for safety this week

  • More than 600 union reps are taking part in a TUC organised action to inspect their workplace buildings
  • Reps are checking for life-threatening problems like RAAC, asbestos and fire-hazards
  • The action is timed for the run-up to Workers’ Memorial Day on Sunday 28 April
  • Unions give workers the power to protect themselves, says the TUC

The TUC has organised a nationwide inspection of workplace buildings this week, with more than 600 trade union health and safety reps taking part.

Building safety has come to the fore in recent years for several reasons, including:

  • RAAC concrete: Reinforced Autoclaved Aerated Concrete (RAAC) was used mainly in public buildings from the 1950s to the 1990s – especially in roofs. It can be present in commercial buildings too. Its safe lifespan is only 30 years. Many buildings that contain RAAC, including lots of schools and hospitals, are now at risk of collapse.
  • Asbestos: Asbestos was widely used in building up to the year 2000. It is very widespread in workplaces across both the public and private sector built before 2000. More than 5,000 people die in Britain each year from diseases linked to asbestos exposure.
  • Workplace ventilation: The Covid pandemic revealed the importance of adequate ventilation in workplaces to prevent infections from spreading. Regulations on workplace ventilation have been permanently strengthened following the pandemic.
  • Fire safety: The cladding associated with the Grenfell Tower tragedy is still present on some office blocks, schools, and hospitals.

The TUC is calling on the government and employers to make workplace buildings safer by:

  • Publishing a national risk register, with public transparency about where hazardous building materials are located.
  • Establishing a ‘remove and improve’ plan for RAAC in public buildings and for other materials causing structural deficiencies.
  • Committing to a 40-year deadline for removing asbestos from public buildings – starting with schools – as called for by the Work and Pensions Select Committee.

The week of action on building safety is part of TUC and trade union activity for Workers’ Memorial Day on Sunday 28 April, when we remember those who lost their lives due to work-related illness or injury and commit to making all workplaces safe.

TUC General Secretary Paul Nowak said:

“Everyone should be safe at work. But when some people step through the door of their workplace, they step into danger.

“This week trade unions are taking action by inspecting the safety of hundreds of workplace buildings. And we are calling on government ministers to speed up the removal of RAAC and asbestos from schools, hospitals and other public buildings.

“If you’re worried about safety at work, get together with colleagues to join a union. Unions give workers the power to protect themselves. And the health and safety reps that we train can be life-savers.”

Notes 

– Extent of RAAC and asbestos in workplace buildings: The full extent of buildings containing RAAC is not yet known. However, it has already been identified in thousands of public buildings, including hundreds of schools and hospitals.

Surveys have so far found RAAC in 234 education settings, and the government says that in 119 schools one or more buildings will have to be rebuilt or refurbished. More information is here. A list of the schools where RAAC has been identified is here: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/reinforced-autoclaved-aerated-concrete-raac-management-information

An estimated 1.5 million buildings in Britain contain asbestos. Research by the TUC and Labour Research Department has uncovered the extent of asbestos in parts of the public estate, including NHS premises in London and Scotland and English local authority buildings.

– Work and Pensions Committee recommendation on asbestos: The Committee’s report ‘The Health and Safety Executive’s approach to asbestos management’ (Sixth Report of Session 2021–22) states: “We recommend that a deadline now be set for the removal of asbestos from nondomestic buildings, within 40 years. The Government and HSE should develop and publish a strategic plan to achieve this, focusing on removing the highest risk asbestos first, and the early removal from the highest risk settings including schools.” (para 52)

– About the TUC: The Trades Union Congress (TUC) exists to make the working world a better place for everyone. We bring together the 5.5 million working people who make up our 48 member unions. We support unions to grow and thrive, and we stand up for everyone who works for a living.

Spain: UGT – El cambio climático, un importante riesgo para la seguridad y la salud en el trabajo

En el Día Mundial de la Seguridad y Salud en el Trabajo desde UGT alertamos de que la crisis climática supone un importante riesgo para la salud de las personas trabajadoras

Para UGT, el 28 de abril es una fecha crucial, en la que recordamos a todas aquellas personas trabajadoras que han muerto o han sufrido las consecuencias de los accidentes de trabajo y de las enfermedades profesionales.

En 2023, según datos provisionales, se produjeron 1.194.907 accidentes de trabajo, y se registraron 721 accidentes mortales, muchos de ellos por causas fácilmente prevenibles. Son cifras muy elevadas: seguimos denunciando 2 muertes al día en el trabajo.

Además de ser un día para el recuerdo, para el sindicato es un día de reivindicación y denuncia, ya que tenemos que visibilizar esta lacra. Creemos que la sociedad ha normalizado las muertes en el trabajo.

Y un día para homenajear y reconocer el trabajo de los miles de delegados y delegadas de Prevención de Riesgos Laborales (PRL) que con su acción sindical cuidan y protegen la salud y la seguridad de sus compañeros y compañeras.

Manifiesto

Este año hemos elegido el lema “La crisis climática, un importante riesgo para la seguridad y la salud en el trabajo”.
Es evidente que las distintas transiciones que están sucediendo afectan a todos los ámbitos de la vida, incluyendo el trabajo y los riesgos asociados al mismo. Ante la velocidad de estos cambios debemos adaptarnos. Por lo tanto, en el contexto actual de transformación, debemos reflexionar sobre cómo garantizar unas condiciones laborales seguras y saludables para todos y todas.

La transición demográfica, con sociedades cada vez más envejecidas, o la digitalización del mundo del trabajo también están afectando a la salud de las personas trabajadoras. La monitorización constante, la falta de desconexión, la intensificación del trabajo, la reducción de la autonomía y determinación de la persona trabajadora sometida a la nueva inteligencia artificial, acaban provocando serios problemas de salud física y mental entre las trabajadoras y los trabajadores.

También desde UGT venimos alertando desde hace tiempo de la necesidad de afrontar e intensificar los esfuerzos para luchar contra el cambio climático. Los expertos señalan a España como uno de los países más vulnerables y los impactos ya están mostrándose.

Por tanto, cambios y retos que precisan una revisión y adecuación del actual marco normativo en materia preventiva a las nuevas realidades del mundo del trabajo.

Debemos anticiparnos y gestionar los cambios derivados de esta triple transición, abordándolos, junto con otros de relevancia, en la mesa de diálogo social que está abierta. Por lo que, desde UGT instamos al gobierno a agilizar los trabajos de esta mesa, con el fin de llegar a acuerdos cuanto antes, con la única prioridad de proteger la seguridad y salud de las personas trabajadoras ante estas transiciones.

> Manifiesto | La crisis climátiica, un importante riesgo para la seguridad y la salud en el trabajo

Scotland: STUC publishes a nationwide listing of 28 April events

International Workers’ Memorial Day (IWMD) is the day that the trade union movement unites to remember workers at home and across the globe who have paid the ultimate price, those who left for work and never returned.

International Workers’ Memorial Day is on the 28th April 2024.

We “Remember the Dead, and Fight for the Living” by pledging to fight for healthier and safer workplaces. Scottish Hazards research indicates that, in Scotland, more than 10 people die each day as a result of work-related incidents and illness. Many of these deaths are caused by health & safety failures.

Events take place across Scotland to commemorate those who lost their lives at work  The STUC listing is here • Scottish Hazards has also publishing a list of 28 April events

#IWMD24

Wales: National Workers’ Memorial Day event, Cardiff

Wales' National Workers' Memorial Day event, Cardiff | TUC

Wales TUC has announced it will hold a morning event on Monday 22 April 10:00 to 12:00 to mark International Workers’ Memorial Day that includes a breakfast roll and hot drink followed by a short ceremony to lay wreaths at the National Workers’ Memorial Stone. The ceremony will be attended by  by dignitaries including trade union leaders.  This year, International Workers’ Memorial Day will focus on exploring the impacts of climate change on occupational safety and health.

Sign up via this form • Attendees are requested to dress in smart dark clothes. For further details  contact; cwilliams@tuc.org.uk