Workers’ Memorial Day falls every year on 28 April. It is a day when trade unions throughout the world commemorate and remember workers who have been injured or killed at work.

This year the day is being marked in conjunction with the TUC’s Day of Action to Fight for the Living and therefore it is important that workers and Labour party members unite to draw attention to this coalition government’s nasty attack on health and safety law.

The effect of this attack will be to destroy the consensus that has existed around health and safety for the last 40 years.  For the best part of that time I have been a full-time official of my union and I have witnessed the significant improvements in health and safety in the workplace, including under the last Labour government.

Unfortunately, I have also witnessed the horrendous effects of poor health and safety management.

The explosion at the Port Talbot blast furnaces, in Wales, just over 10 years ago, killed three of our members and seriously injured many more. This week our members at the plant will remember those involved in the explosion with a service at a memorial garden, which has been created to commemorate those workers.

Regulation, enforcement, personal injury compensation, guidance, codes of practice and standards are all things that are regularly lumped together in lazy attacks on ‘elf’n’safety’.  But they are also things that underpin people’s daily working lives and ensure that people don’t risk death or injury just by going to work.  All this is under threat from the Tory-led government’s deregulatory agenda, as clearly demonstrated by the prime minister himself when he said earlier this year:

‘So this coalition has a clear new year’s resolution: to kill off the health and safety culture for good. I want 2012 to go down in history not just as Olympics year or diamond jubilee year, but the time we get a lot of this pointless time-wasting out of the British economy and British life once and for all.’

The prime minister seems oblivious to the fact that employers’ ‘failures’, like the Port Talbot explosion, combine to cost the country over £14bn every year.

As a progressive union we try to work together with good employers to improve working conditions and reduce accidents and on the whole we are successful.

We are also looking to develop new partnerships with employers to develop occupational health programmes for our members and also to look at how we combine health and safety with the new climate change and environmental agenda.

To achieve this we require the support and expertise from the Health and Safety Executive.  One of the many fundamental flaws in the government plan is that cuts to the HSE will undermine their role in improving health and safety by advising employers and businesses.

This is compounded by the message the government is sending out to employers by implying that the laws are unnecessary and do not matter, that health and safety is not important and that there is no need for rules and regulations.

That will mean that more and more workers will be put at risk, made ill and killed or injured at work.

Community will continue to campaign for safer workplaces and a better health and safety system to protect our members, whether this is by working together with employers for better conditions or fighting government for better regulation.

As part of Workers’ Memorial Day events, we are also asking our members to lobby their local MPs and I will be writing to David Cameron to voice our members’ concern over this government’s shabby and opportunistic approach to health and safety.

Rather than engaging in an ‘elf’n’safety’ public relations campaign to endear himself to unscrupulous bosses and the right-wing media, the prime minister should listen to his own government’s reviews like the Löfsted report and focus his effort on reducing the UK’s ill-health, accident and fatalities statistics.

As we mourn the dead on Workers’ Memorial Day, we also renew our resolve to fight for the living – a fight that Labour must take to the Tory-led government.

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Michael Leahy is general secretary of Community the union

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Photo: Elliott Brown