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Posted By Dave Wilson
Barbour Index produced this in their weekly news letter
Proposal for a new duty to investigate accidents, dangerous occurrences and diseases
The HSC has issued a consultative document on implementing a new duty to investigate accidents, dangerous occurrences and diseases. This follows a discussion document issued almost two years ago which sought initial views on the need for investigation and the scope of the new duty.
At that time, the main options discussed were:
making no change in the law, but providing further guidance on methods of accident investigation
introducing a simple duty to investigate accidents, which would require an employer to take steps that are reasonable and proportionate to the accident, to establish the causes and then take them into account when revising the risk assessment
introducing an elaborated duty which would be the same as the simple duty but would include more requirements, such as sending a report to the enforcing authority.
The new document examines the results of the earlier consultation, which clearly showed a preference for making an amendment to the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 – this idea is the basis of the HSC’s latest proposals. Regulation 3 (risk assessment) would be altered to introduce a new schedule on investigation. However the new duty could equally be inserted into other health and safety regulations, such as RIDDOR, to link accident reporting and investigation, or be issued as a set of stand-alone regulations.
The consultative document asks:
if the duty to investigate should be incorporated into the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations and, if not, what the preferred legislative route is
whether the duty to investigate should apply to those accidents reportable under RIDDOR, or whether the scope should include a different range of accidents. At this stage, HSC proposes retaining the same scope as RIDDOR, with a review during 2001/02
whether the duty to investigate should apply to near-misses, but be limited to those dangerous occurrences reportable under RIDDOR or should encompass a different scope. HSC proposes to issue guidance on investigating near-misses, but without a statutory requirement to do so
whether the duty to investigate should apply to diseases,
but be limited to those reportable under RIDDOR or should encompass a different scope
whether the duty holder should be the same person as the one who has the legal duty under RIDDOR to report accidents, dangerous occurrences and diseases, or whether someone else should be responsible. Here the HSC proposes that the ‘responsible person’ as defined in RIDDOR be the person who investigates. As things currently stand, the employer is implicitly responsible for accident investigation
whether an investigation should start within the timescales set out in RIDDOR. Enforcing officers would be required to show sensitivity in cases where (for example) a small business operator could be involved in the death or major injury of a member of the family or close working associate. There are also requirements to involve workers’ representatives and, on occasion, the health and safety inspector
whether the proposals for keeping records of investigations are sensible and workable, or if they should be aligned with the requirements of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations, with RIDDOR or with both. There is a possibility that requirements may be extended to change the organisation’s safety policy and safe working methods, if appropriate
what arrangements are currently in place in the respondents organisation for record keeping in respect of the investigation of accidents
whether the legal duty should be extended to include providing the investigation findings to others, for example, the person involved, their safety representative or the employers’ liability insurers
whether respondents want to make any general points about the approach adopted in the proposals.
The document includes a draft version of the proposed 2001 Regulations in which the new duty will become Regulation 3A and is detailed in Schedule 1 to the regulations.
The consultation document contains further annexes which are:
the principal findings of the previous discussion document
the regulatory impact assessment, which summarises the costs and benefits of the new duty
an extensive summary of HSE research into current industry practice on incident investigation
the response form for the consultative document.
Comments should be sent by 3 September 2001 to:
Health and Safety Executive, Policy Division, SASD, 8 South Wing, Rose Court, 2 Southwark Bridge, London, SE1 9HS
tel: 020 7717 6426
The consultation document can be viewed on the HSE website at:
www.hse.gov.uk/condocs/
HSE Books
Free (Single copies)
CD169
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