Posted By Ken Urquhart
Ashley,
You have certainly generated some interesting debate with this one, so here are some of my thoughts and current experiences on the issue.
What kind of Business is this Company.
What product(s) do they manufacture or process and or what services do they provide.
Is there a risk that the product or the process is polluted or contaminated by human excretia or urine.
If personnel are denied access to proper sanitation or the facilities that are provided are unsanitary, not cleaned etc., then personnel in desparation will find ways and use places to releive themselves.
What about Hand Washing, if the Business processes Food related products/substances, or just in simple hygiene terms.
This restriction will undoubtedly attract all sorts of Risks wihin the Businesses premises and potentially could allow contamination of materials, components, goods, product, premises etc.
Putting aside legislation regarding right of access to and the use of provided Toilet facilities, (Statutorly provided at that).
How would this company cope with a Web and local Media exposure that its products and or services could be contaminated by human waste, that they , the goods or their premises where they offer services could be unsanitary and a Health Risk?
As maybe a possible Customer of this Organisation I would want to know about the quality of the product or service and any Health risk so that I can make an informed decision as to whether or not I continue to do business/trade with this Dickensian sounding company.
As a potential consumer/user of their product/services, if I found that by purchasing/using their product that I was liable to Health damage becuse the companies personnel were not allowed to go to the toilet except at times and at intervals dictated by the Employer, then I for one would certainly take the matter up with whatever local and national stautory body or local authority department might have jurisdiction and I would certainly make a song and dance about it.
It also occurrs to me, do we know how the so called Management, the people who made these Company rules address their natural needs to achieve Bodily Functions at will, comfortably and at a time and location in a facility available to them.
I am currently working in Hong Kong and I am involved with the Constuction Industry here and with the myriad of contractors and the rampant Tiering system of Sub Contrcting that prevails.
Defication and Urination on Hong Kong Construction Sites is rife and even in glossy completed buildings in this Asia's so called premier city there are areas where several years after construction completion and occupancy you can still smell the stale urine from where the construction workers used an area of the building as a toilet during construction.
Under The Hong Kong Factories and Industrial Undertakings Ordinance, there is clear provision in Law for Toilet and Washing facilities to be provided and maintained. (Being a former British colony these now SAR regulations very much reflect the Former UK Factories Act requiremnts that are now long enshrined in EU and UK Workplace Legislation).
The interesting aspect however is that under the same Ordinance, a separate code of Regulations exists that applies to Construction Sites in Hong kong. (Construction Sites Safety Regulations)
Within these Regulations there is a requirement on the "Contractor responsible for the Construction site", (in this instance The Principal Contractor) to "provide sufficient and suitable latrine and washing conveniences on the site and, where persons of both sexes are or are intended to be employed, such conveniences shall afford proper separate accomodation for persons of each sex."
(There are quite a large proportion of Hong Kongs Construction Site personnel, who do mostly physical labouring tasks I might add who are FEMALE,and who are often given little separate ameniety and or respect by the Male dominated work population on the site).
However, when you sek official guidance or interpretation from The HK Labour department, the body that polices this legislation as to what is the advisory or what is considerd as sufficient and suitable, The ratio of numbers of facilities to numbers of workers, there is NO official guidance.(For Construction sites)
Under the Factories Legislation that I eluded to earlier however there is within that Legislation itself a precise scale table.
I have tried to get the Labour Department here at least as an interim measure,to take that scale schedule as the minimum and apply it to Construction Sites but so far to no avail.
Contractors here because of the Tiering and Sub contracting regieme intrpret there obligation as applying to there direct personnel, which is usually low in number so they then provide ONE (1) Chemical Toilet and ONE (1) water standpipe and hose and that is all they are prepared to provide by way of Employee welfare and sanitation provision. (Often the Contractors Commercial people then muscle in and argue that they have fullfilled their statutory duty and any further provision would be a cost that they had not allowed for and that they had no obligation to incurr).
In fairness, not all the contractors behave like this and some of the Major Clients and The Government Department clients specify more stringent standards. Such requirements are slowly driving change but there is still a long long way to go.
The fact remains however that Welfare provision, particularly toilet and washing provision for Construction workers here in Hong Kong is to say the least, archaic and totally inadequate.
Interestingly though is the quality and the povision of Toilet and washing facilities at the same construction sites SOLELY for the use of the Contractors STAFF Personnel. The Worker personnel are discriminated against. (But I am working on that also).
I must close now and dash or there might be a local incident, I am now in that age where the male systems and plumbing are not quite what they once were, no one is stopping me).
Regards
Ken Urquhart