Doug
On page 12 of the Health and Safety Matters edition you refer to, I summarise the trade union’s general position in the article entitled ‘Employers Behaving badly?’
On other posts:
1 It is not just UNITE who think most Behavioural Safety Programmes fail to deliver. Dominic Cooper, a well respected Behaviour Safety specialist often referred to on this forum in relation to Behavioural Safety stated the following in his most recent book, ‘Behavioral Safety - A Framework for Success’ (2009):
‘The major underlying reason that 99 percent of all Behavioral Safety processes fail is a loss of credibility.’
Please note the word ‘all’. A 1% success rate seems to equate with UNITE’s National Officer stating ‘many’ BS programmes don’t work.
2 Another specialist, James Reason, Professor Emeritus at the University of Manchester, reflects on the ‘Perceptions of Unsafe Acts’ in his book ‘The Human Contribution: Unsafe Acts, Accidents and Heroic Recoveries’ (2008). He identifies a number of models including the ‘Person Model’ which, he states, ‘is intuitively appealing (and still remains the dominant perception of unsafe acts).’ He then goes on to state:
‘Nonetheless, the shortcomings of the person model greatly outweigh its advantages, particularly in the understanding and prevention of organisational accidents.’
This indicates that there may be inherent weaknesses in many – but not necessarily all – BS programmes.
3 BS programmes have been a feature in the remarkably successful accident record at the Olympic Development Site in London. Lawrence Waterman, Director of Health and Safety at the ODA said the following at the Allen St John Holt Memorial Lecture in 2009:
‘It’s not mountaineers and Formula 1 drivers but ordinary workers who are put at risk by poor planning, inadequate procedures, limited training, cost-cutting maintenance and a host of other failures within organisations which were the responsibility of their directors and managers. The wholehearted embracing of behavioural programmes shouldn't blind us to the fact that most accidents can be prevented by better management at work.’
4 Making the point that BS programmes work when managers do everything right is a statement akin to the world is round. While technically correct it is not particularly helpful. If everybody did everything they were supposed to, the world would be a completely different place from the one we currently inhabit.
5 From what I can gather the general thought is that we should be concentrating on developing a positive health and safety culture within an organisation that takes into account many organisational and human factors. For some, BS programmes may add a benefit but they are just a tool and there are others that are as equally effective.
UNITE and the learned people I quote are drawing attention to the point that in too many instances, BS programmes are not properly implemented; lacked credibility with both managers and workers; and – presumably – failed to deliver. From my own background, I see worker involvement as a central strategic issue for any organisation’s development.
Unfortunately too many organisations only pay lip service and fail to deliver even the basic legal consultation rights for workers. (The HSE estimate that 60% of employees are not consulted by their employers, despite a legal obligation to do so.) Not only is this illegal but such employers miss out on the opportunity to improve their health, safety and business performance by directing the practical knowledge of their workforce into improving their organisational systems. BS programmes often become a distraction from more effective worker involvement processes.
Anyone interested in buying a copy of my book on worker involvement can e-mail me!
6 Facetious remarks about UNITE – and by implication other trade unions - should be reflected against the fact that in total the TUC cover over 6 million workers and – through the individual trade unions – support around 120,000 workplace safety representatives. In UNITE’s case they have around 1.5 million members and will have 10,000s workplace safety representatives. The number of individual workplaces they cover must be huge. While it is interesting to find individuals who love BS programmes because they work in their individual organisations, UNITE are reflecting their experience in many, many thousands of workplaces.
7 Given that it is generally workers that die, are maimed and injured through workplace incidents, my main concern about BS programmes is that they tend to limit worker’s views about what health and safety is about. Instead of comprehensively going through worker’s rights to consultation; health and safety representatives rights; the effective implementation of the general principles of prevention; the effective role of workers in developing risk assessments; identifying procedures for when supervisors, managers etc fail to deal with complaints etc, the tendency is to concentrate on how to identify, log and deal with ‘unsafe acts’ thus changing worker’s behaviour. If BS programmes are so good, why aren’t they applied to company boardrooms and at executive level to change their behaviour?
I concluded some time ago that the most effective thing that many BS programmes have achieved is to get people to wear PPE. In health and safety terms this is the ‘last resort’ and the bottom of a preventative hierarchy. Quite an expensive way of supporting the least effective preventative measure.
Cheers.
Nigel