Posted By Kieran J Duignan
Merv - and other viewers....
The significant difference in perspective has to do with strategy rather than tactics, with delivering benefits rather than beltings (other than in cases of manslaughter or homicide: arguably organisations guility of such negligence are cases for extinction before they cause further suffering).
I see the UK (and Irish) safety system as suffering from the understandable compromises of the historical circumstances in which it muddled through. In that sense, it's like the NHS - a worthy ideal originally, now all too often overwhelmed in bureaucracy. This was dramatically illustrated to me by a senior hospital consultant, working at director level, in a hospital in the south of England, with whom I was chatting with over the weekend. She told me that during the last six months (not years!), her hospital has had 3 chief executives (and the appointment of the fourth is submerged in strife!). While she inevitably has to trim her sails continually to what staff for whom she is legally responsible are willing and able to deliver, she is only too aware of the failures she tries to shore up, having chosen explicitly during recent years to make the most of her career within the NHS.
In that light, I v. much respect the commitment of all those whose job it is to operate safety systems to do what the great majority do: processing 'legs and regs' carefully into some sort of processes that offer human reinforcements for safe behaviour and into ergonomic work-systems; and at the same time, I now think it is worth advancing the case that dwelling mainly on legal compliance is of itself putting oneself in the situation of my friend the medical consultant, painting oneself into a corner.
I believe the 'big picture' realignment is best viewed in terms of larger systemic changes in funding, through different forms of insurance premiums rather than the fines proposed by Bob. In other words, the UK will expand private insurance at work and rationalise the present civil litigation system, ideally along Australian lines where rehabilitation and accident prevention are serious economic propositions.
Writings of economists like the Scottish guy, John Kay (Oxford and the LSE), who is all for EFFECTIVE specialisation, persuade me that within 25 years, cost-effective conduct of safety will be happening through a merged HR/safety function (although perhaps this may be 'unofficial' as IOSH and CIPD and smaller groups like the Erg Soc and the Occ Hygience Society, etc. may be left trailing along separately for a further generation still), on the one hand, with occupational medicine and health re-aligned with insurers as a development of the rehabilitation improvements in recent years through the emergent Case Management Services UK, punching much heavier than its present weight, on the other.