UNIONS
CALL FOR
WORKCOVER
REHAB
INQUIRY
30
March 2008
SA
Unions
Secretary,
Janet
Giles
will
tell the
influential
Industrial
Relations
Society
that the
real
problem
with
WorkCover
is the
rehabilitation
industry.
Ms Giles
has been
invited
to
address
IR
Society
members,
including
leading
lawyers,
judges
and
Industrial
Relations
Commissioners,
at a
breakfast
symposium
on 31
March.
It comes
on the
eve of a
CFMEU
rally at
Parliament
House on
Tuesday
1 April,
the
first in
a series
of
actions
leading
up to a
community
rally on
3 May.
Ms Giles
will use
her
speech
to
outline
the
union-driven
campaign
to fix
WorkCover
without
sacrificing
fairness
for
injured
workers,
and will
call for
an
inquiry
into the
core of
WorkCover's
problems,
the
rehabilitation
industry.
"The
simple
fact is
there is
no
guarantee
that the
changes
proposed
in the
government's
current
legislation
will
make the
system
better,
because
it fails
to
address
the core
problem."
"Until
there is
an
independent
inquiry
into the
operation
of the
WorkCover
rehabilitation
system,
I fear
we will
not see
any
improvement
in
return
to work
rates.
It would
therefore
follow
that we
won't
see an
improvement
in the
scheme's
financial
performance
either."
"Honest
workers
face
financial
hardship
for
what?
As it
stands
at
present,
they'll
be
paying a
hefty
price
for a
government
that
wants to
look
like its
taking
action,
is
delivering
benefits
to bug
business,
but
failing
to fix
the
fundamental
problems."
"The
failure
to
address
rehabilitation
practices
is
inextricably
linked
to one
of the
worst
aspects
of the
government's
Bill -
the
intention
to
completely
cut off
support
to
workers
with
serious
injury
if they
have not
recovered
within 2
and a
half
years."
"This is
a recipe
for
rorting.
There is
no
mechanism
in the
existing
Bill to
generate
good
behaviour.
There is
no
incentive
for
employers
to
assist
workers'
recovery
and
return
to the
workforce.
It does
the
opposite,
instead
sending
a
message
to
employers
that
they can
tread
water
while
WorkCover
pays
workers
for 2
and a
half
years in
the hope
they
then
disappear."
"We want
a system
that
actively
promotes
swift,
safe
return
to work.
That
requires
an
overhaul
of
rehabilitation,
and a
better
system
than one
that
encourages
employers
to drag
things
out so
they can
wash
their
hands of
responsibility
after a
couple
of
years."
"That's
why
we're
rallying.
While
we're
lobbying.
Why we
have the
backing
of the
community.
And we
won't
stop
until we
achieve
genuine
fairness",
Ms Giles
says.