I'd like to reply in particular to the original post by dsb, and to the later post by Graham Bullough. Forgive the length of this post, but important issues have been raised. In a discussion about a particular court case, there is often a lack of detailed information. I have followed the media reporting of this case and any subsequent discussion I could find with great interest. Perhaps the most informative case summary can be found here -
http://theehp.com/2012/0...-accident-case-summary/. The article was written by Daniel Mulryan, who I believe was a witness in the case and is an EHO for Warwick DC. It appears to me to be a fair summary. There is also a link to some photos on Flickr that help us to understand the location.
Graham asks whether there is a common standard of safeguarding for visitors to such buildings and structures. In my somewhat biased view as a former member, I would refer people to the work of the Visitor Safety in the Countryside Group (VSCG) (www.vscg.co.uk). This Group has been in existence since the mid 1990's, and its membership includes English Heritage, the National Trust and the National Trust for Scotland, and Historic Scotland among many others. Its meetings are usually attended by a representative from HSE's Leisure and Entertainment Sector. The Group has published a guidance booklet, endorsed by HSE, called "Managing Visitor Safety in the Countryside", although its content is also relevant to historic buildings. The website contains practical guidance, a number of case studies and relevant case summaries. The need to find an appropriate balance between safety, conservation and access has been a primary concern of the group since its existence, and the issue of unprotected or partially protected drops has been discussed on many occasions. There is no single or simple solution, as Graham has observed at his visit to York City Walls, and each situation needs to take account of local factors through the risk assessment process. Because this needs to take account of the importance of our historic heritage, the landscape or the quality of the visitor experience, then ideas about risk-benefit assessment promoted by the play sector and recently in NTSG guidance on tree safety management are relevant. I believe that the VSCG and HSE are considering the implications of the Warwick Castle case.
Incidentally, at York City Walls, there have in my memory always been barriers at points of greater risk, where the wall crosses above a road. My impression is also that additional barriered sections have been installed in recent years.
dsb asks 3 questions:
1. Based on the above case does this mean that every area where any person could trip and subsequently die should be protected by barriers?
Not in my opinion. To provide universal barrier protection would necessitate massive investment and impact on our historic buildings, and/or massive restrictions in public access. It would drastically devalue the visitor experience - most people visit these places to experience a sense of what they were like in historic times and modern safety precautions can detract from that. The impact on sites such as Tintagel (EH), Fountains Abbey (NT), Stirling Castle (Historic Scotland) would be enormous.
2 Has the overall concept of reasonably practicable shifted?
I don't think so. This is just one case. The key thing from now on is whether the enforcing authorities change their approach. Possibly in this case, the lack of a specific risk assessment of the bridge was an important factor.
3.Has the concept of people taking responsibility for their own health and safety now disappeared?
No, I don't think so. The work of the VSCG in particular emphasises the importance of personal responsibility in an appropriate balance between management intervention and user self-reliance.