Posted By R Joe
An interesting item on the bbc breakfast programme this morning was a councillor from Chelsea (I think) talking about the government’s new ‘anti ambulance chaser’ legislation announced today. In giving examples of people and organisations being petrified about the prospect of claims – and hence the (health and safety) response to this – he cited (1) a volunteer who wanted to take a group of old ladies for a walk in a local park being required to have a risk assessment by a ‘risk assessment officer’ which contained a finding / warning of ‘mud – watch your step’. (2) The proliferation of signs over hot water taps warning of ‘hot water’. His view was that surely the money spent on these things could be better spent. On the basis of watching this item what percentage of the UK population would disagree do we think?
As ever, this may well not be the ‘fully story’ but the reporting of these things in this way clearly doesn’t help the case of the ‘health and safety professional’ – nothing new here. One of the key things, however, in my view is our pressing collective, professional need to now restore a sense of perspective to the ‘risk assessment’ process itself, including a focus on significant risks and, in addition, their distinction from what most people would consider to be ‘everyday risks’ which most people should be able to appreciate and take account of e.g. going for a walk in park will require people to think about their footwear, and a hot water tap can be expected to contain hot water unless it were marked otherwise e.g. ‘scalding hot water’ – in which case the question would be why can’t this be avoided?
It could well be argued that we as the profession (aided, abetted, pushed and cajoled by the enforcing authorities in some cases) have, in effect, now raised ‘risk assessment’ to the level of an answer and panacea to everything. Just like (the early days??) of COSHH, everything now needs a ‘risk assessment’ and just like COSHH in many, many, many cases we are no better at actually managing the significant risks despite the weight of additional paperwork now created.
I believe that we should take a long hard, collective look again at what the Management Regs ACoP actually says about risk assessment i.e. starting with it being a ‘systematic GENERAL examination’ along with the examples of risk assessment in practice that HSE have given in HSG183 ‘5 Steps to Risk Assessment – Case Studies’. Because, although most of us could find plenty of weakness with each of the case studies, we have, in effect, taken and/or allowed ourselves to be pushed to the opposite end of the ‘risk assessment’ continuum where we have lost all sense of perspective and now spend a lot of time agonising about either (1) not having a ‘risk assessment’ for everything that moves and/or (2) that despite the sheer number and weight of ‘risk assessments’ that we now have, we have still missed something - like mud in the park.
Don’t misunderstand me, risk assessment is a GREAT tool used as it should be – and I believe as it was intended. However, in my view, we now need to collectively stand up and reclaim this perspective with the backing from IOSH, and where it’s needed, fight our corner (including protecting our members in court if necessary) to ensure that we retain risk assessment as the useful tool it should be, and not an increasingly derided requirement for every activity that exists, 'imposed' by a growing army of ‘risk assessment officers’.
Regards RJ