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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Zizi Sparks: Abuse on the job should not be tolerated

Zizi Sparks
By Zizi Sparks
Multimedia journalist·Bay of Plenty Times·
26 May, 2021 09:00 PM2 mins to read

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Lifeguards were reportedly abused when trying to warn people away from a dangerous situation. Photo / NZME

Lifeguards were reportedly abused when trying to warn people away from a dangerous situation. Photo / NZME

OPINION

It is disappointing to hear volunteer lifeguards copped verbal abuse when warning people away from dangerous swells at Mount Main Beach at the weekend.

Everyone deserves respect when doing their job and it sounds like those lifeguards didn't get it.

The volunteer lifeguards were called due to dangerous sea swells and were telling beachgoers the Mauao base track had been closed and it was dangerous.

But some people "gave them the middle finger and pushed on through".

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In doing so, I believe they not only risked their own lives, but the lives of people who would have had to come to their rescue had they got into trouble.

It's not the first time we have heard of workers being abused on the job.

Last month, NZME reported abuse of parking officers in Tauranga went through the roof last year with 15 cases of people verbally abusing Tauranga wardens in 2020 alone — more than three times the previous high of four cases in 2017.

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In Rotorua parking wardens were assaulted and abused nearly 20 times in the past five years, including one incident in which a person who drove towards a warden - thankfully missing.

It is enough to make you not want to volunteer as a lifeguard or to work as a parking warden. But someone has to.

Discover more

Moturiki and Mauao base track reopened

24 May 07:27 PM

Moturiki and Mauao base track closed overnight

23 May 09:36 PM
New Zealand

Biggest swells of 2021: North Island's east coast smashed

23 May 03:49 AM
New Zealand

Fatal crash driver was on P, boozed, driving wrong way on SH2

26 May 07:00 PM

In the case of the lifeguards, these are experts and they are warning people off for a reason — because there is a clear and present danger.

Often we hear of – or witness – the likes of retail workers being given a hard time for mistakes they didn't make or for human error.

Maybe a store is out of stock, or something has taken longer to ship than expected.
In my view, whatever the reason, there is no excuse to abuse someone verbally or physically, or to treat someone as lesser than ourselves.

Before we think about snapping at someone, we should put ourselves in their shoes or ask if it is really their fault something went wrong.

We're all only human and all deserve respect when doing our jobs, including lifeguards.

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