• Home
  • Contact
  • Privacy Statement
  • Site Map
  • Links

Occupational Health And Safety Reps. Information, Advice, Support...Speaking Up Together

Ask
Renata
 All Site    SafetyNET
  • Subscribe
  • Tell a friend
  • Change font
    • A
    • A
    • A
    • A
  • Print this page
  • Save this page
  • Hazards
    • Asbestos
      • Asbestos in the home
      • Asbestos in the workplace
    • Asthma
    • Biological Hazards
    • Bullying & Violence
    • Call Centres
    • Chemicals
    • Fatigue & Impairment
    • Infectious Diseases
    • Nanotechnology
    • Noise
    • Plant
    • Radiation
    • Slips, Trips and Falls
    • Strains and Sprains
    • Stress
    • Vibration
    • Workplace Conditions
  • Law & Rights
    • Law
      • The OHS Act
      • Regulations
      • Compliance Codes
      • Codes of Practice (1985 Act)
      • Comcare
      • Model OHS Law
    • Rights
      • OHS Reps' Rights
      • Workers' Rights
  • News & Views
    • Media Releases
      • Subscribe
      • Media Releases Archive
    • International NewsWire
    • Features
    • People in OHS
    • Campaigns
      • Asbestos Awareness
      • International Workers Memorial Day
      • Zero Occupational Cancer
      • Behaviour Based Safety
      • International RSI Day
      • It's time to deliver
    • Your Say
    • OHS Reps Conferences
      • OHS Reps Conference 2005
      • OHS Reps Conference 2006
      • OHS Reps Conference 2007
      • OHS Reps Conference 2008
      • OHS Reps Conference 2009
      • OHS Reps Conference 2010
      • OHS Reps Conference 2011
  • FAQs
    • Asbestos
    • Electrical Safety
    • Workplace and Amenities
    • FAQs for OHS Reps
    • FAQs for Workers
    • Other
  • SafetyNet Journal
    • Current Issue
    • Subscribe
    • Un Subscribe
    • SafetyNet JOURNAL Archive
      • SafetyNet 2012
      • SafetyNet 2011
      • SafetyNet 2010
      • SafetyNet 2009
      • SafetyNet 2008
      • SafetyNet 2007
      • SafetyNet 2006
      • SafetyNet 2005
      • SafetyNet 2004
      • SafetyNet 2003
      • SafetyNet 2002
  • Your Industry
    • Construction & Utilities
    • Education
    • Government (local, State)
    • Health & Community Services
    • Hospitality
    • Labour Hire
    • Manufacturing
    • Mining
    • Office/Admin
    • Rural
    • Service Industry
    • Transport, Storage & Trade
  • Training
    • Subscribe to Training News
  • ToolKit
    • Behaviour Based Safety Programs
    • Mapping
    • How to...
    • Checklists

News & Views

  • Media Releases
    • Subscribe
    • Media Releases Archive
  • International NewsWire
  • Features
  • People in OHS
  • Campaigns
    • Asbestos Awareness
    • International Workers Memorial Day
    • Zero Occupational Cancer
    • Behaviour Based Safety
    • International RSI Day
    • It's time to deliver
  • Your Say
  • OHS Reps Conferences
    • OHS Reps Conference 2005
    • OHS Reps Conference 2006
    • OHS Reps Conference 2007
    • OHS Reps Conference 2008
    • OHS Reps Conference 2009
    • OHS Reps Conference 2010
    • OHS Reps Conference 2011
 
  • Home
  • News & Views
  •  > People in OHS

"Have a Look Mate"

This came from Barry Dunn, currently a WorkSafe Inspector, previously an HSR on the docks.

It was on one of my first night shifts, that I heard the words used, for that meaning, for the very first time.

I looked at the old hand Wharfie who’d spoken the words through the darkness in the ships hold, and wondered… ‘What’s he on about’?

Cliff gestured upward with his head, and I looked up to see another container was being craned in, some 20 odd metres directly above me; not surprisingly - I remember the words well!

Over 8 years working on the Waterfront, I heard (and used) the words countless times, always when a colleague was in a hazardous situation which they hadn’t recognised.
 
I never once saw a person ‘take offence’ upon hearing the words.

I’m not quite sure where the words originated, the Bosses never ‘taught’ them to us; but Stevedoring is a ‘tight’ industry, rich in heritage where traditions and lingo have passed through generations.

It’s easy to imagine that the words evolved among mates, when Tall Ships plied the new country, or perhaps they arrived with us from Docks in our Motherlands?

What’s difficult to imagine though, is how many lives the words have saved, or how much suffering they’ve prevented.

I left the Waterfront in 2004 and returned to Construction; off-the-tools now and working OHS.

The work (unfortunately) regularly gives me cause to ponder questions about ‘safety-culture’, and similarities between Stevedoring and Construction; in both industries, risk never sleeps…
    

  • Men work to tight schedules, in tight spaces, which they have to share with suspended loads and heavy powered mobile plant… second chances are few.
  • Men toil at heights and heavy repetitious manual tasks, in all elements, to secure a livelihood for themselves and the ones they love.
  • Mates care, and try to watch out for each other’s backs.
  • Both industries contain many ‘rough diamonds’ that are not particularly fond of interference, or being told what to do.
  • Workers continue to be killed, maimed and injured needlessly, with unacceptable regularity.
 
Still, despite all similarities, Construction remains poorer, but for want of one small thing…

A few simple, but ‘universally understood’ words that can be spoken between fellows, without fear of offending… “Have A Look Mate!”

Barry Dunn – Inspector
Construction & Utilities Program
WorkSafe Victoria

PS: Thanks Cliffy

More Items

  • Glen Barber, WorkSafe’s HSR of the Year, 2010

    What makes Glen a great rep? What advice does he have for others?...read more

  • Interview with Derek Jones - 2008 Rep of the Year co-winner

    Derek Jones is one of the joint winners of the 2008 OHS Rep of the Year. We spoke with him about winning the award and some of the important lessons he has learned over his six years as an occupational health and safety rep...read more

  • Marg Howard, WorkSafe's HSR of the Year, 2011

    Read more about Marg Howard, HSR at Nestle Uncle Tobys and member of the NUW....read more

  • Tarek Soueid - Rep of the Year

    Tarek Soueid was awarded the Health and Safety Representative of the Year for 2007....read more

  • Vale Bernie Banton, a true Australian hero

    The tireless anti-asbestos campaigner, Bernie Banton, passed away peacefully in his sleep at 1am Tuesday November 27th, 2007. ...read more

  • Vale Tony Medina

    A dedicated union member and organiser, Tony lost his fight with mesothelioma...read more

  • Brodene Wardley - 2006 OHS Rep of the Year

    At the 2006 WorkSafe Awards Brodene Wardley was nominated Occupational Health and Safety Representative of the year.  Brodene is a CFMEU member who believes that standing up and speaking out are very important on sites like the one she worked at: the Hamilton Sands Project....read more

  • Pat Preston - OHS Manager CFMEU

    Pat Preston, the 2005 recipient of the Award for Outstanding Leadership and Contribution to Health and Safety, is well known throughout Victoria’s construction industry as the Manager of the Construction Forestry Mining and Energy Union’s OHS & Environmental Unit.  and he is widely respected for his passion, untiring work and achievements in the cause of construction safety....read more

  • Jack and Deanne May - IDSA

    Prior to this year's International Workers' Memorial Day, SafetyNet spoke to Jack and Deanne May, president and secretary of IDSA respectively – the Industrial Deaths Support and Advocacy Inc. ...read more

  • Professor Harry Glasbeek - Corporate Crime Fighter

    Professor Harry Glasbeek has been described as ‘one of several almost unsung heroes of the Canadian occupational health and safety movement’....read more

  • Peter Gordon: Fighting for asbestos victims' rights

    Peter Gordon is a Senior Partner with the well-known labour law firm Slater & Gordon, who has for over 20 years sought justice and compensation for thousands of workers exposed to the deadly fibre, asbestos. He spoke with SafetyNet about 2 asbestos-related matters that are currently engaging his attention....read more

  • Owen Tudor - Unions and OHS

    Owen Tudor, then the director of the Occupational Health and Safety Unit at the UK Trade Union Congress was in Australia in May 2003. Owen spoke at a number of OHS related forums, including the ceremony at VTHC for International Workers Memorial Day, at the ACTU and at WorkSafe Victoria. SafetyNet asked Owen a few questions on OHS generally, and the role of reps and unions in particular....read more

  • Anne Hudson - Back-injured nurse activist

    Anne Hudson, RN, BSN (USA), founder of the Work Injured Nurses’ Group in the United States (WING USA), and now author and activist.  Anne was in Australia as a guest of the Victorian Branch of the Australian Nursing Federation (ANF) and spoke at the ANF’s "No-Lifting Expo"....read more