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Industrial manslaughter, for example in Australian Capital Territory law, is a crime where the action or inaction of an employer results in the death of an employee. Industrial manslaughter usually has a much broader scope than standard criminal manslaughter.
Industrial manslaughter legislation is a common demand of trade unions, to allow the criminal prosecution of owners and employers for workplace deaths.
Implementation
editThe Australian Capital Territory has provisions for industrial manslaughter introduced in 2004. ACT Crimes Act 1900 (A1900-40) R32 13 July 2004 p44
In 2017, industrial manslaughter became an offence in Queensland in their workplace health and safety legislation, the Work Health and Safety Act 2011.
Despite the offence existing in four jurisdictions as of 2020, there have been no successful prosecutions.
In New South Wales on the 16th of September 2024, the crime of Industrial Manslaughter came into effect following the passage of the Work Health and Safety Amendment (Industrial Manslaughter) Act 2024 earlier that year.[1]
Demands for Industrial manslaughter in NSW
editIn New South Wales provisions for industrial manslaughter were demanded by the trade union movement after the adolescent building industry worker Joel Exter fell off a domestic roof and died. Joel's union, the CFMEU conducted a significant campaign around his death. The Labor Party (ALP) government of NSW under Bob Carr denied that industrial manslaughter provisions were necessary as Workcover already has provisions for dealing with industrial death. The trade union movement argued that the manslaughter provisions of Workcover were ineffective, as reflected by a lack of prosecution of employers for workplace death.
Party positions on Industrial Manslaughter
editThe NSW Liberal Party does not believe specific industrial manslaughter provisions to be necessary.
The NSW section of the Australian Greens believes that industrial manslaughter should be a federal crime.
Victoria Passes Workplace Manslaughter Legislation
editThe Victorian Parliament passed the Workplace Safety Legislation Amendment (Workplace Manslaughter and other matters) Bill 2019 on 26 November 2019 and is expected to come into effect on a day to be proclaimed or, at the latest, 1 July 2020.[2]
References
edit- ^ NSW, SafeWork (16 September 2024). "Work Health and Safety Amendment (Industrial Manslaughter) Act 2024". SafeWork NSW. Retrieved 2 October 2024.
- ^ "Victoria's new workplace manslaughter offences". WorkSafe Victoria.