Quarry Southern Africa March 2018 | Page 35

HEALTH & SAFETY IN FOCUS Gov legislation and COPs in the spotlight Doug Potter What is a COP? If you’ve never worked on a mine, a COP is a Code of Practice. Codes of Practice complement health and safety laws and provide detailed information and practical guidance on how to comply with legal obligations and ensure employee safety. In the past, the government left it to the companies themselves to manage their own health and safety programmes. The feeling was that the mining houses needed a little assistance, so the Department of Mineral Resources (DMR) put together minimum standards for each mining house to ensure that there is uniformity across the board when it comes to legislation for each mining topic. Today, there are COPs on fatigue, safety, hours of work, trackless mobile machinery (TMMs), minimum standards of fitness and many more. Each of these Codes of Practice have been put in place to help make the workplace, and therefore the employee, safer. As a consultant in the industry it has always puzzled me how the mines and their employees perceive legislation. When you are on a mine and they hear that the DMR is coming you see extra personnel cleaning, safety workers doing last minute inspections and everyone moving faster in response to fear like springbok running from a lion. The old view is that the DMR is put on earth to close mines down or to punish them, but smarter employees and mine managers know that the department is there to make mines safer and to keep them open, not shut them down. On a mine I was visiting in the Northern Cape in 2014 I saw a mine manager tell his employees we do nothing different when we have visitors from any inspection group. He then preceded to explain this mine is your home. We keep our home clean and safe everyday just like this mine and if we are only cleaning we our home / mine when guests come over then we are not doing things properly. I believe government legislation is meant to keep us safe, like speed limits on the roads, and that mine manager hit the nail on the head. We don’t slow down on the mine and speed up as we hit the gate. We follow the rules and legislation and we are a better society for it. ■ What’s going on with all these Codes of Practice (COPs) coming up? Dr Doug Potter is the director of Fatigue Education at Predictive Safety. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Dr Doug Potter is the director of Fatigue Education for Predictive Safety, a fatigue and wellness company that focuses on the shift work patterns of 24/7 industries such as mining, manufacturing and trucking. He has worked with multiple major mining houses on their fatigue management COPs and programmes. QUARRY SA | MARCH/APRIL 2018 _ 33