News release
21 December 2010 - NR 60/10
Councils should “stand up and be counted” over event
cancellations – urges leading health and safety body
Proposals to introduce more clarity and
transparency around council decisions to ban public events have
been welcomed by a leading health and safety body.
The Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH) said
the new Government proposals would force officials to stand up and
be counted rather than hide behind vague references to ‘health and
safety’. The introduction of such rules should help with
decision-making and reveal the true reasons behind many of the
cancelled community activities publicised in some sections of the
media.
Former employment minister Lord Young of Graffham made the
recommendations in a UK Government-commissioned review of health
and safety. In findings published in October, the peer suggested
people should have a formal method of challenging decisions made by
their local authority.
In ‘Getting
the Balance Right’, its response to the review, IOSH says
councils should get professional health and safety advice up front,
before decisions about public events and activities are made in the
first place.
Health and safety professionals “have the knowledge and knowhow”
to find a way to make things happen, the Institution said.
IOSH, the world’s largest body for health and safety
professionals with more than 38,000 members, publishes its response
this week ahead of a line of Government consultations on Lord
Young’s recommendations.
The organisation said ministers would risk weakening public
health and the national economy if they implemented all
recommendations made by Lord Young.
His report – ‘Common Sense, Common Safety’ – was published after
Prime Minister David Cameron ordered a fresh look at health and
safety and the perceived compensation culture.
IOSH welcomed the review as a “long overdue attempt to restore
the reputation” of the profession.
But in ‘Getting the Balance Right’, the Institution says there
are problems with a number of the proposals, and that the review
has “missed opportunities”.
IOSH is also calling for:
• Safety standards to be maintained in the drive to
simplify school trip planning
• School, professional and vocational training curriculums to
include balanced risk education
• More clarity on the scope of the proposal to consolidate
health and safety regulations
• A clear, accurate way of capturing the full national picture
of deaths, injuries and illness at work
• Work-related road deaths, injuries and illness to be
included in the reporting regulations
• A proper pragmatic review of how multi-site retailers are
inspected
• The HSE’s role to be reviewed – the regulator is facing a 35
per cent cut under the Comprehensive Review, but Lord Young’s
proposals would expand its remit
At the same time, IOSH believes Lord Young’s review has missed
opportunities. The Institution is concerned that the former
Government adviser largely ignored the ‘health’ in work-related
health and safety.
And IOSH thinks the Government is missing the chance to get
“risk thinking” right from the start, by including properly
co-ordinated, balanced risk education in schools and in vocational
and professional training.
IOSH chief executive Rob Strange said: “We
welcome the coalition government’s review, and its scrutiny of what
David Cameron describes as the ‘damaging compensation culture’ that
has over-shadowed genuine health and safety issues over the last
few years. For that alone it marks a turning point.
“But we urge the government not to opt for
overly simplistic solutions that compromise standards and leave
hard-working people vulnerable. Weaken health and safety, and you
risk weakening both public health and the national economy.”
- Ends -
Notes for editors:
IOSH is the Chartered body for health and safety professionals.
With more than 40,000 members in 85 countries, we’re the world’s
biggest professional health and safety organisation.
We set standards, and support, develop and connect our members
with resources, guidance, events and training. We’re the voice of
the profession, and campaign on issues that affect millions of
working people.
IOSH was founded in 1945 and is a registered charity with
international NGO status.
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