Dairy Exporter December 2021

Page 46

SPECIAL REPORT

It’s a

health and safety issue

Words by: Anne Hardie

E

mployers are being urged to avoid the potential conflict between vaccinated and unvaccinated staff by being proactive about the culture within their workplace and clearly communicating their expectations. Vaughan Granier is national workplace relations manager for HR Assured NZ and he says there could be hard times ahead for employers such as farmers as they navigate the uncharted waters of the Covid-19 workplace. The last thing anyone wants is accusations flying between vaccinated and unvaccinated employees which may create a toxic workplace culture. That’s just one aspect of the vaccinated-unvaccinated dilemma. Employees need to know early on if they need to be double vaccinated in their role and what restrictions they face onfarm, or with contractors, vets, AI technicians and anyone coming onto the farm, if they are unvaccinated. At the same time employers need to remember privacy laws and employees don’t have to tell them if they are unvaccinated. Though if they don’t say they are vaccinated, they will be considered unvaccinated because employers need to have a plan in place. 46

COVID FATIGUE

Ideally, Granier says employers need to start communicating with their staff early - before conversations are weighed down with emotional content. “When an employer does nothing about culture, then the employees create that culture,” he says. Employers should never talk about who is vaccinated and who is unvaccinated and shouldn’t treat anyone differently. Rather, they should try to create a culture where everyone is treated the same. When an employee informs their employer of their vaccine status – or doesn’t – the employer must treat it as personal information which comes under the Privacy Act 2020. That information is only shared internally on a need-to-know basis. “Employers should encourage people not to have those discussions among themselves – employees should respect privacy and stay away from inflammatory debate.” If employers have had discussions with staff about their expectations, he says staff are more likely to be self-censoring and not cross the line. Employees can be given informal warnings if they are causing conflict and he says employers should keep a record of what they are doing and what has been said, in case they then have to give a formal warning.

For the wellbeing of the workplace, ongoing warnings might lead to termination of employment, although Granier wouldn’t recommend Vaughan Granier. any employer to terminate an employee in this situation without thorough legal advice. Clarity on where the law stands will depend on some cases being heard in the courts. While employers can’t discriminate against someone’s view on vaccination, he says they can require employees to be double vaccinated for certain roles because of health and safety reasons. On farms, a particular role that interacts with people coming onto the farm may need a vaccinated person because of the potential impact of transmitting the virus to someone who could then take it far and wide. At the same time there is the need to minimise the impact of getting an infection within the farm’s workforce and employers may have to change roles around to keep people safe. He suggests employers should ask staff to tell them if they don’t want to be

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | December 2021


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

The Dairy Exporter in December 1971

3min
pages 90-92

Gen Z to make their mark

4min
page 89

Tracmap unit eases compliance pain

3min
page 88

Never too late to learn

5min
pages 86-87

A beetle to beat the thistle

2min
page 85

Plants waiting to be weeds

2min
page 84

The art of saying no

5min
pages 82-83

Variety from consulting to composting

7min
pages 78-81

Vet Voice: More to it than

4min
pages 74-75

Fast track to management

5min
pages 76-77

Reducing heat stress over summer

2min
page 73

M. Bovis: It had a head start

6min
pages 71-72

Restoring Horowhenua’s waters

6min
pages 65-67

And now, freshwater plans

3min
page 64

Sustainability: Gaining the knowledge

8min
pages 58-61

Open Country: Online tool for FEP

3min
pages 62-63

When will all this end?

5min
pages 54-55

Social media and anti-vax The dirty dozen

6min
pages 56-57

How to handle Covid-19 coming onfarm

3min
pages 50-51

No Jab, No Job in the milking shed

4min
page 48

It’s a health and safety issue

4min
pages 46-47

Dealing with vaccine reluctance

3min
page 49

Taranaki soft core

12min
pages 34-38

When the lights go red

5min
pages 44-45

Prepare for a virus attack

6min
pages 42-43

Ryegrass: Twelve years of torture

6min
pages 39-41

Benchmarking: Measure it to be sure

5min
pages 32-33

Ahuwhenua Trophy: Taking the leap to manager

5min
pages 26-27

Spending the payout: new kit or cutting debt?

8min
pages 14-17

Ahuwhenua Trophy: Quality on the coast

9min
pages 22-25

Frances Coles loves being an ambassador for Kiwi farming

3min
page 10

Future farming will need to give more than profit, writes George Moss

3min
page 12

What a payout, writes John Milne, but what prices

2min
page 13

Market View: Hedging bets on Singapore

3min
pages 20-21

Global Dairy: All change at FrieslandCampina

5min
pages 18-19
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.