Death & public humiliation! Getting tough on H&S March 1st 2008 Julian Roberts, managing director of Safety Media explains that companies and
organisations all over the country are being pressed by their lawyers,
accountants and insurance advisers to take immediate steps to put their health
and safety house in order. The surge of interest in the subject heralds the
Corporate Manslaughter and Homicide Act 2007 under which employing
organisations can face unlimited fines and other penalties if gross failures in
their management of health and safety result in a death
Organisations with good health and
safety cultures need do nothing to
comply with the law, which contains
no new obligations nor imposes additional
regulatory burden. The government's
principal aim was to make it easier to
convict organisations for deaths caused by
negligence, by reducing the need to prove
manslaughter by one of the 'controlling
minds' within an organisation's senior
management. It has been difficult to prove
a convictable link between a death and the
'controlling mind' in large organisations in
the past, and one memorable prosecution
to fail in this respect was that of P&O
European Ferries following the sinking of
the Herald of Free Enterprise
For organisations less rigorous in their
approach to health and safety the stakes
have never been higher. A conviction
under the act can result in fines of more
than 10% of turnover but with no set upper
limit, and a publicity order which compels
the organisation to publicise the
circumstance of its conviction in a way
specified by the court. This may mean
advertising its disgrace
on national media, on
its own website or
its annual report.
Under the spectre
of public humiliation
and unlimited
fines many
organisations
would do well
to revisit the
training,
attitudes and
policies which
underpin their safety
cultures and check for
failures. A jury would consider all evidence
that 'shows that there were attitudes,
policies, systems or accepted practices in
the organisation that were likely to have
encouraged any such failure or produced
tolerance of it.' In other words, the whole
approach to health and safety will be
scrutinised, and any collection of failings
may allow the conclusion to be reached
that the defendant was criminally deficient.
While organisations and companies and
not the individuals associated with them
will be prosecuted under the new law,
which will come into effect on April 6,
directors and senior management remain
vulnerable under existing legislation.
Prosecutors will target them if suspected
of having personally committed the
offence of common law manslaughter –
that is, for gross negligence in the conduct
of their management roles – in the same
way they would have done before.
One area of health and safety which
should be reviewed is training, and not just
for the rank and file. Responsibility for the
management of Health and Safety lies with
a company's directors, and even they
cannot be sure that their business
practices result in full compliance if they
are ignorant of the regulatory landscape
and of their responsibilities within it. An
organisation must be able to demonstrate
good 'attitudes, policies and systems'
should the need to defend itself arise, and
that begins in the
boardroom.
The Ministry of
Justice guidance
says that factors
which may be
considered when
investigating senior
management failures will
include the systems of
work used by employees,
levels of training, adequacy
of equipment, and issues of
immediate supervision and
middle management.
Ensuring that staff are correctly
trained in health and safety is essential
in ensuring health and safety standards
are met and maintained.
It is not all bad news. Insurers always
welcome well managed, quality 'risk,' and
by improving training and revitalising
health and safety generally it is frequently
possible to substantially reduced
insurance premiums. Maintaining a
positive approach to your risk management
is key to your Liability Insurer's acceptance
and pricing of your business; significant
changes made to the way you view health
and safety could bring significant benefits.
And even when things have gone wrong in
the past it should be possible to
demonstrate that lessons have been learned
and steps taken to ensure that mistakes
aren't repeated, and that the organisation is
an even better risk as a result.
Organisations and companies which
ignore the new offence of corporate
manslaughter will do so at their peril
because the powers it affords the courts
are substantial. However, because the
law does not bring new obligations nor
demand specific action there is a risk that
the opportunity will be missed by many, at
least until the first public confessional and
reports of huge fines start making
headlines.
Safety Media specialises in safety
training products, including E-Learning,
software and DVDs. It recently issued a
free manslaughter information pack and
an online tool that allows firms to assess
their safety culture. For details see
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