Posted By Ironbath
Late last night there was a 30 minute report on the Stockline explosion. It is available on the BBC news player at
http://news.bbc.co.uk/pl...l_storyid=6968489&news=1I also read the transcript of a radio 4 report from 2005 (http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/facethefacts/transcript_20050812.shtml) This is not a balanced report as the company has no input but it gives a witness account of the conditions and general perceptions of safety management.
I think that the judgement is generous to the company, as it appears to attribute the accident to an oversight rather than persistent negligence of maintenance and inspection. The lack of building control and planning permissions should have had greater significance in the judgement as these inspections might have triggered questions about the gas pipeline.
It is difficult to comment on the fines as these should be dependent on the full financial position of the company, although they seem low. I wonder if the fact that the Directors’s family was involved in the explosion had any bearing.
In my mind the lessons are:
a) The potential of high numbers of fatalities from sub-comah facilities.
b) The lack of persistent regulatory involvement with a company that been issued Enforcement and Improvement notices, and employee complaints.
c) The risks from housing office based employees directly above potentially hazardous operations. This is a factor of the old industrial buildings used and is common throughout the country.
I think that companies with >50 employees (or >20 for more hazardous operations) that don’t have a competent H&S adviser (poss CMIOSH) should be compelled to have an annual inspection/report from a professional consultant. Outcomes would be sent directly to HSE/EHO’s for review. This is similar to regulation in Spain and Italy.
I also think that we need to consider separation of manufacturing roles from employees who can be located away from hazardous operations. A few years ago I argued against relocating 300 office employees to a site that also contained a top tier COMAH site. Unfortunately the economics of low cost offices prevailed.
I am certain that there are many SMEs based in old industrial buildings, much modified over the years, where risk assessments have been completed by vacation students, and where there is a lingering safety issue – be it a corroded gas pipe or overloaded circuit, or unstable structure. Yet somehow these companies don’t make it on the Regulators radar.
It is currently an unfashionable view in politics but I wish that there was a stronger regulatory regime, where an HSE Inspection had the same gravitas as an OSHA Inspection in the US and where there were the resources to identify companies with a sub standard attitude of H&S management. This means inspections of a day instead of an hour, where detail could be probed rather than a superficial inspection. In countries with a strong H&S regulatory regime there is far greater respect for H&S management and those people delivering it.