The safety of retail staff in relation to knife crime and its impact on the wider community was the focus of the third meeting of the Retail Employee Safety Council (RESC).
The meeting in Sydney yesterday (27 March) opened with members trialing the innovative virtual reality training offered by Woolworths to staff for handling abuse and violence in-store, as well as discussions around regulation, policy and training.
In addition to the VR training provided by Woolworths, the agenda included:
- Review of CCTV footage of incidents of customer aggression and violence within a retail setting.
- A briefing from Shop, Distributive and Allied Employees’ Association (SDA) National Assistant Secretary Helen Cooney on safety issues associated with knives and bladed items.
- Safe Work Australia outlining for the Council upcoming changes to the model Work Health and Safety laws, including new incident notification requirements.
The RESC is supportive of the introduction of consistent legislation across all jurisdictions including prohibiting the sales of knives to minors (under 18) and the introduction of minimum packaging standards for the sale of knives to reduce ease of access within retail stores.
The RESC committed to exploring the development of industry design standards to provide retailers with guidance on store design, and safety settings to reduce risks associated with customer violence and aggression.
Increasing incidents ‘deeply concerning’
Australian Retailers Association (ARA) Chief Industry Affairs Officer Fleur Brown says that increasing incidents of customer aggression and violence across the nation are deeply concerning.
“Sadly, one in 10 retail crimes were violent last year, meaning many staff have been left fearing for their safety at work which is simply unacceptable,” she says.
“We remain focused on advocating to the government to implement proven measures that improve the safety of retail workers.
“These include the introduction of workplace protection orders and strengthened police search powers to remove knives and dangerous weapons from the streets.
“Retail is a key focus of the ARA’s federal election advocacy campaign as we call on policymakers at all levels of government to invest in the safety of a sector that employs 1.4 million Australians and generates $430 billion annually.”
SDA’s Ms Cooney says it’s important to send a message to the community that retail workers deserve respect and to be safe from knives.
“Reporting must be easier for retail workers to do the moment an incident occurs. Data provided by workers can and should inform industry wide solutions,” she says.
“Patterns of behaviour in the lead up to serious incidents and prevention of attacks by repeat offenders could surely be found more easily if retail workers inform the response.”