Posted By Jay Joshi
Why is it that everytime the Chartered status is publicised or promoted, some in non-Chartered fraternity get so sensitive, to the extent that they do not seem to be fully reading the press-releases & more importantly, what the Regulation, ACoP & Guidance to Regulation 7 of the Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulations 1999 requires.
Firstly, the Norwich Union risk services press release appears to be originating from the IOSH press release dated 11 January 2006.
http://www.iosh.co.uk/in...m?go=news.release&id=247The IOSH press release amonst other things states;-
The Government says it is “fully supportive” of the introduction of a chartered qualification for professional health and safety advisors and pledges to recommend all advisors, where appropriate, to work towards achieving it.
In response to a Parliamentary Question, Anne McGuire, Minister for Disability in the Department for Work and Pensions gave her unequivocal support to the UK’s 6,000 recently chartered practitioners.
There is also a comment by the by the past president:-
“You wouldn’t employ someone who wasn’t Corgi-registered to deal with a faulty boiler, and you wouldn’t want an accountant dealing with your finances who wasn’t chartered. The same rule should apply to health and safety.
“We’re raising our game so that business and industry can reap the benefits. The days when a health and safety practitioner could go around a workplace with just a checklist and pen have long gone. Chartered safety and health practitioners will be a different breed, providing practical solutions to everyday problems in the workplace and communicating in the language of business.”(end of extract from press release)
If you analyse the DWP pledge for support etc, the OPERATIVE TERM USED IS “WHERE APPROPRIATE” ! There is no mention that the pledge is for all advisors/advice.
Secondly, the ACoP & Guidance to Regulation 7 of the Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulationa 1999 is in some ways clear about this.
ACoP to Regulation 7:
Employers are solely responsible for ensuring that those they appoint to assist them with health and safety measures are competent to carry out the tasks they are assigned and are given adequate information and support. In making decisions on who to appoint, employers themselves need to know and understand the work involved, the principles of risk assessment and prevention, and current legislation and health and safety standards. Employers should ensure that anyone they appoint is capable of applying the above to whatever task they are assigned.(ACoP ends here0
Guidance to Regulation 7:-
Competence in the sense it is used in these Regulations does not necessarily depend on the possession of particular skills or qualifications.
Simple situations may require only the following:
(a) an understanding of relevant current best practice;
(b) an awareness of the limitations of one's own experience and knowledge;
and
(c) the willingness and ability to supplement existing experience and knowledge, when necessary by obtaining external help and advice.
More complicated situations will require the competent assistant to have a
higher level of knowledge and experience. More complex or highly technical
situations will call for specific applied knowledge and skills which can be offered by appropriately qualified specialists. Employers are advised to check the appropriate health and safety qualifications (some of which may be competence-based and/or industry specific), or membership of a professional body or similar organisation (at an appropriate level and in an appropriate part of health and safety) to satisfy themselves that the assistant they appoint has a sufficiently high level of competence.(Extract from guidance ends here)
It is the latter case of more compliacated situations that the Chartered Status goes a long way in facilitating the employer to discern and diffrentiate. Nobody has mentioned that one requires a Chartered Safety & Health Practitioner for ALL situations. It is obvious that the comparision with CORGI was in this context.
Can we please try to see the new membership structure i.e BOTH the chartered CMIOSH and TechIOSH as a positive development rather than it being TechIOSH vs CMIOSH ?? There is room for both !
On a personal basis, it is my view that in the long term-perhaps in the nexxt 10 to 15 years, most of those entering the safety profession will tend to progress to Chartered status.
In USA, there is a designation of "Certified Safety Professional"
The Board of Certified Safety Professionals is a not-for-profit organisation. It operates solely as a peer certification board with the purpose of certifying practitioners in the safety profession. (It is not a membership organization) Its functions include:
• Setting standards related to professional safety practice.
• Evaluating the academic and professional experience qualifications of safety professionals.
• Administering examinations relating to professional safety knowledge and skills.
• Establishing recertification standards in the Continuance of Certification (COC) program.
• Authorizing individuals meeting BCSP standards and paying an annual renewal fee the use of BCSP designations:
- Associate Safety Professional (ASP) [an interim designation to show progress toward the Certified Safety Professional]
- Certified Safety Professional (CSP)
This can include members from professional safety organisations such as:-
• American Society of Safety Engineers
• American Industrial Hygiene Association
• Society of Fire Protection Engineers
• Institute of Industrial Engineers
As we do not have the equivalent of the above, the TechIOSH & CMIOSH categories will be roughly equivalent to the ASP & CSP designations.
For the record, I do not hold any IOSH positions except on a IOSH branch committee, but I am now a Chartered Safety & Health Practitioner