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DavidBrede  
#1 Posted : 09 November 2012 16:57:27(UTC)
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DavidBrede

The government is seeking to take away workers’ rights to bring civil claims for breaches of health and safety legislation. Such a clause was quietly inserted a clause into the Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Bill which passed through the Commons on 16 October 2012 without any consultation. It will be debated in the House of Lords on 14 November 2012. The significance of this cannot be overstated, and the example of the legal case that cemented the original principle into law shows this.

Section 5(4) of the Factory and Workshop Act 1878 imposed a duty on employers (or ‘masters’ in Victorian parlance) to provide fencing for dangerous machinery. In the late 1890s, a boy had to have part of his arm amputated after he was caught by the unguarded cog wheels of a steam winch. His employer came before the court, and the case is reported as Groves v Lord Wimborne [1898] 2 QB 402. The judge said that the employee had the benefit of ‘an absolute duty imposed by statute upon his master for his protection’. What it means, quite simply, is that if a worker is injured as a result of an employer breaching an absolute duty imposed by the law, then the employer has no substantive defence and the worker is likely to win their legal case and obtain compensation. This not only represents justice for the individual who is injured, but it also provides a wider benefit to society in that employers are kept on their toes in being health and safety conscious.

The government claims that criminal liability will still remain enshrined in health and safety law and that employees can still make civil claims in negligence. That is correct, but allowing employees to bring claims in negligence only, rather than breach of statutory duty, gives employers a far wider defence to such claims in which the degree of risk to the employee is only one factor to be considered; high cost is another. In the case of Groves, for example, while the unguarded cog wheels may have posed a high risk, the employer could have argued that the likelihood of an injury was slim and the fencing was too costly. Under the law as it currently stands, this argument is not possible: the duty to guard is an absolute one.

This is no mere legal technicality. Thousands of claims brought by employees that are currently successful will no longer be successful. Absolute duties, ‘strict liability’ and even those regulations subject to a defence of ‘reasonable practicability’ (which is still a higher standard than common law negligence) will all be, in effect, neutered. The incentives for employers to take health and safety seriously are being taken away. Labour’s shadow business minister Andy Slaughter was entirely right when he said that this was part of a ‘sustained campaign’ in the civil justice system to shift it ‘away from individuals and small businesses, in favour of large corporations’. Remarkably, the cabinet minister who is be responsible for this piece of legislation is a Liberal Democrat, Vince Cable. He should be totally ashamed of himself.
KieranD  
#2 Posted : 09 November 2012 17:59:39(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

Thoughtful observation, David. Yet my understanding is that the elimination of absolute liability was recommended by Loftstedt on the grounds that it places an excessively onerous responsibility on employers.

In the specific case you've chosen, is it not the case that the responsibilities set out in PUWER continue to apply to controlling risks when using machinery that poses hazards?
DavidBrede  
#3 Posted : 09 November 2012 19:03:08(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
DavidBrede

Indeed he did.

The essence of the issue is that by removing civil liability a major weapon for injured workers to get redress is lost so the pressure of employers to maintain safe systems of work is lessened.

The burden of proof in civil cases is balance of probability rather than the absolute of criminal law.
KieranD  
#4 Posted : 09 November 2012 19:45:03(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

But for the grace of Loftstedt (and organisations like IOSH which lobbied him skilfully), the legal changes might be a lot worse.

Overall a set of changes may have the cumulative effect of improving safeguards for employees. The changes include:
a. the introduction of FFI
b. the introduction of the OSHCR and its gradual expansion of other professional groups e.g. chartered psychologists came into its scope this week
c. the steady maturation of the OSH profession in recent decades.
DavidBrede  
#5 Posted : 09 November 2012 20:18:59(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
DavidBrede

Indeed they may have been.

a. FFI only kicks in if an Inspector Calls? You break your arm slipping on a dodgy scaffold. you may not get one coming round.

b. OSHCR is for consultants in the main to so employed H&S practitioners are not there and are maybe not sufficiently qualified.

c. Agreed, the profession has come a long way and IOSH deserves a lot of the credit however it is not mandatory for a firm to have qualified advice so how will that protect workers?
cliveg  
#6 Posted : 09 November 2012 20:31:13(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
cliveg

Thanks David
Interesting stuff, and I share your concerns.

The guidance that gets anyone who is interested past the impenetrable legal bumf of the bill itself is to be found here:-

http://www.publications....13/0045/en/2013045en.htm

The brief put together by the Bill's sponsors for the Lords is:-

444. Professor Löfstedt’s review Reclaiming health and safety for all: An independent review of health and legislation (November 2011) identified the potential unfairness that arises where health and safety at work regulations impose a strict liability on employers, making them legally responsible to pay compensation despite having done all that was reasonable to protect their employees. Professor Löfstedt recommended that regulatory provisions which impose strict liability should be reviewed. In its response to the review the Government recognised this unfairness and agreed to look at ways to redress the balance, in particular by preventing civil liability from attaching to a breach of such provisions.

445. The amendment to the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 ("HSWA 1974") reverses the present position on civil liability, with the effect, unless any exceptions apply, that it will only be possible to claim for compensation in relation to breaches of affected health and safety legislation where it can be proved that the duty holder (usually the employer) has been negligent. This means that in future, for all relevant claims, duty-holders will only have to defend themselves against negligence.

446. The measure applies to health and safety regulations made under section 15 of the HSWA 1974 (including regulations which also rely on additional vires) and existing statutory provisions as defined by the HSWA 1974 (being certain Acts made prior to 1974 which are listed in Schedule 1 to the HSWA 1974 and any secondary legislation made or having effect under those Acts). The clause also provides a power to amend other health and safety legislation which does not fall into these categories, enabling the policy to be extended should this be required in the future.


Note the last sentence, once they have got this through it will not take further legislation to extend it. So as in the case of the extension of FFI, further rights can be removed with the stroke of a minister's pen, without any further recourse to Parliament.
KieranD  
#7 Posted : 10 November 2012 05:52:51(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

David/Chris

While it might be ideal to aspire to comprehensive legal protection, the case advocated by Loftstedt - regulation in so far as reasonably practicable, based on scientifically-verifiable evidence - is arguably the best possible in the foreseeable future.

What is missing from pre-occupation with legislative intervention is appropriate attention to cultivating a contrasting pole to unfairness, namely trust. Trust as a dimension of safe, healthy workingis not simply valuable between 'masters' and 'servants' and their modern equivalents but in so far as possible throughout organisational behaviour. Limits of regulation and wellsprings of trust are usefully examined in 'Organizational Trust and the Limits of Management-based Regulation', N Gunningham and D Sinclair, Law & Society, vol 43 (4) 865-899. 2009.
Zimmy  
#8 Posted : 10 November 2012 09:16:45(UTC)
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Zimmy

This will keep me busy for the weekend. Thanks lads (I think)
Betta Spenden  
#9 Posted : 10 November 2012 11:05:48(UTC)
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Betta Spenden

There are always two sides to the coin and a balance needs to be struck. I think (IMO) that the reference to thousands of claims is inaccurate as some current legislation does NOT ACTUALLY allow the process.

Whilst I do not want a return to the “doffing of the cap at the factory gates” days. Is this REALY going to make that much difference? I also think that these type of topical threads can by too easily railroaded by those wishing to express their own political views, not professional views.
cliveg  
#10 Posted : 10 November 2012 12:24:57(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
cliveg

Hello
In answer to Keiran - absolutely, there should be a trusting relationship between employer and employee, and in most cases that probably does exist.

However, we are clearly not all the way there yet. 173 people dies at work last year and 156000 suffered 7 day injuries.

In answer to Betta - the honest answer is I don't know, we'll have to see. However one of the fundamentals of a good safety system is effective consultation. I cannot see how hiding a significant piece of legislation unannounced in amongst the weeds of an Enterprise bill amounts to proper dialogue. Its not a party political point, both of the last Governments did it.
KieranD  
#11 Posted : 10 November 2012 13:22:56(UTC)
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KieranD

The employment law researcher whom I believe frames safety most appropriately, Hugh Collins at London School of Economics, categorises safety in terms of 'organsiational citizenship', with the rights, responsibilities and options for partnership available in any healthy democracy.

Yet the best forms of employee partnership in the world are unlikely to absolutely prevent all accidents and even fatalities, outside high hazard systems with complex controls that are time-consuming and relatively costly.

There are some useful research reports, commissioned by the IOSH, free of charge on this website, under the 'Books and resources' tab, worth reading on this subject.
RayRapp  
#12 Posted : 10 November 2012 22:22:55(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

I am not convinced that Lofstedt has got this right.

Civil redress provides a social utility function for those injured at work through negligent employers. It is not about 'claim and blame' but to ensure there is a means to provide someone for loss of earnings through the civil courts.

If you listen to this Government you will find that they are overly bias towards the employer. Just recently they announced that rather than provide employment rights for employees, they should take a share option in the company instead. Another half brained notion that has not been properly thought out.
RayRapp  
#13 Posted : 10 November 2012 22:26:39(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

ps Let's hope the House of Lords see good sense and kick this amendment into touch. Who is lobbying against the proposal? Perhaps IOSH should be flexing some muscles.
KieranD  
#14 Posted : 11 November 2012 08:40:47(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
KieranD

While I can well respect the belief that legislation should safeguard people at work, is it not advisable to have due regard for available evidence on what actually does prevent occupational injuries?

The only research I have to hand is a sumary of an article in the research journal, Safety Science in 1993. in it the author, Guastello reports using a technique known as 'meta analysis' which compiles evidence from a host of studies. Based on two studies, he reports that legislation has the effect of reducing accidents by an average of 18.3%. This is a little better than management audits (4 studies - 17.0%) and poster campaigns (2 studies - 14,0%) and quite a lot better than selecting with an eye to safety disposition (26 studies - 3.7% improvement. Yet, according to Guastello's data, legislation is not as effective as group problem solving (1 study - 20.0% reduction) and is a long, long way behind ergonomic interventions (3 studies, 51.6% average reduction) and 'behavioural safety' (7 studients - 59.6% average reduction)

So, unless there is compelling evidence since 1993, if what you're really committed to achieving is reducing occupational injuries, transfer your energies, time and other resources into promoting ergonomic and behavioural safety intervention, which appear to be around 3 times more effective than legislation. (If I were commercially minded, I might even be tempted to advertise some great-value used books on these subjects.....)
boblewis  
#15 Posted : 11 November 2012 09:42:20(UTC)
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boblewis

Kieran

I fully agree with the studies on interventions and they match my own experience entirely. The problem is that the best methodologies for accident prevention require proper but not over bureaucratic interventions and activities. Many behavioural systems tend this way however.

The real question though is about access to justice and whether the "strict liability test" cases were actually ever a major issue as the HSE have steadily inserted RA and thus made SL more difficult to follow through. When coupled with the move to Contingent type fees based on damages awarded it does seem that there is a move to close out the injured from an ability to sue the malfeasor. This does seem rather unfair as there are still major injuries and fatalities at work. Unless we are to move to a universal workers compensation scheme I think the government is plain wrong in their stance re strict liability.

I do recognise the unfairness to the employer but the cases where they actually could not have done something are few and far between. They are the people who put the employee in potential harms way and civil law places a duty of care on all who so do. Yes it is a pre-Victorian hangover but equally so is the desire to ensure workers cannot claim and be compensated for their pain and suffering and disability. In Victorian times it seemed that fatality was better and cheaper than injury for the employer, it could be swept out the gate or "buried". What changes?

Bob
KieranD  
#16 Posted : 11 November 2012 10:26:53(UTC)
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KieranD

While 'access to justice' is a reasonably good summary statement of aspirations, its implementation is a historical process involving far more than passing laws.

The clause is actually the title of the autobiography of Lord Woolf who steered the Access to Justice Act 1999 through parliament. My modest personal acquaintance with its direct outcome lies in paragraphs 35 and 36 which regulate the process of appointing, managing and delivering expert witness services. As the training for this role makes clear, before that Act, very often legal proceedings had very much a 'trial by ambush' character by contrast with relatively robust disclosure of evidence as the basis for trial, in both civil and legal cases.

While it may be the case that removal of 'strict' liability lacks fairness, it is a moot point whether there are members of either houses of parliament who combine the necessary understanding, skill and commitment required to generate the necessary opposition. It took the granite-like resistance of the unusually well-informed Baroness Shirley Williams, and the commitment to the NHS she developed in a relatively classless home, to galvanise the support necessary to dilute the more crude proposals to the bills that have recently changed the NHS.

What remains a matter of concern about the Loftstedt review, and of the part played by IOSH in its composition, is how procedural justice relies on scientific evidence in interpreting laws. This is especially the case in relation to human behaviour, whether physical, cognitive or affective. It remains extremely difficult for claimants in civil cases about even severe musculoskeletal and stress-related cases to find a medical specialist to stand by an opinion that appears 'reasonable', in the sense that recurrrent failures of managers to respect pleas for help were dismissed or ignored. The instance of the Court of Appeal in the case of Intel v Daws dramatised this: before her attempted suicide, Daws (and her supportive line manager) made no less than 14 claims under the grievance procedure that her workload was excessive; time and time again, senior managers including HR, dismissed her claim relying simply on their assertion that 'counselling' was a sufficient management tactic (as in the Sunderland and Hutton cases). The point is that the argument was lost by the employer at the highest level on the grounds of both medical and ergonomic evidence (the latter about work design).

The reference by Bob L is disability is pertinent and partly valid, in so far as it is taking the same kind of historical evolution for consensus to emerge about controlling safety as it has about discrimination. What seems 'common sense' and 'obvious' remains difficult to sustain without robust scientific argument. Ironically, even some prestigious expert ergonomists with engineering backgrounds commonly make quite crass errors in their statements about human behaviour of a social nature when they substitute physical principles (e.g. every action has a reaction), for socially valid evidence, even though what they asssert has been experimentally rejected several decades ago and written up in hundreds of scientific journals. A lot of progress has been made in social psychology over the past 4 decades, especially in Europe, but it's application in psychology too often remains restricted to 'behavioural safety', with its individualistic assumptions.

While 'a long revolution' can feel arduous, its outcomes are usually more robust than sprints that leave little trace.
johnmurray  
#17 Posted : 11 November 2012 10:47:32(UTC)
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johnmurray

KieranD wrote:

So, unless there is compelling evidence since 1993, if what you're really committed to achieving is reducing occupational injuries, transfer your energies, time and other resources into promoting ergonomic and behavioural safety intervention, which appear to be around 3 times more effective than legislation.


Probably.
Maybe.
We appear to be heading for the next element of research into safety without legislation.
The research you quote above Kieran would be persuasive, if conducted in an environment in which there was little, or no, legislation governing health, safety and welfare at work (congratulations: I nearly understand what you're saying now. My fault I'm sure !).
When I see extensive research conducted in the SMALL COMPANY/BUSINESS environment reach that same conclusion I may pay more attention to it (after all, the closest thing to an unregulated H&S environment in the UK has to be the small biz (not unregulated by lack of regulations but unregulated by lack of interest in same))
martinw  
#18 Posted : 11 November 2012 11:43:02(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
martinw

But Kieran, this highlights the difference between the 'lower' or first instance courts and the court of appeal. In the lower courts the evidential reliance in safety cases is largely based on comparison of behaviour with standards, legislation, and whether these were known and followed: the court of appeal has more of a tilt towards interpretation, public policy and reasonableness. That is why the Porter case (for example) was rightly booted out for being the idiotic action that it was - but it had to get to the court of appeal before that could happen.
Anyway, it is a bit chicken and egg really - there are numerous factors which contribute to to legislation. There are occasions where it is widely known that if you do not do something, then if it goes wrong you will suffer - seatbelts - and the law had to be changed to force people to wear them, because people were being irrational( 'I haven't worn a seatbelt in forty years and have never had an accident' etc.) The evidence supported action from a medical perspective. In other areas, it was good old fashioned social science research which led to the results being fed to policy makers, who then drafted the legislation.
Whatever the route, evolution or revolution, if safety is enhanced then all the better. But a fait accompli like removal of the rights of those injured to sue in many ways is disappointing but in a wierd way logical even if I do not agree with it.
KieranD  
#19 Posted : 11 November 2012 12:09:06(UTC)
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KieranD

JohnMurray....

Your observations about small companies may be supported by research conducted by staff at De Montfort University which indicated that compliance with employment law, not only safety law, in small firms is very variable.

As the research confirmed, non-compliance can well be extensive with the result that lack of safety control may also reveal absences of valid contracts of employment and recurrent violation of several forms of unlawful discrimination.

Yet, because the chain of command is relatively straightforward, at least in family businesses, they can respond quickly to remedy conditions once they get a plain-language risk assessment, especially one that relates safety improvement to possible ways of improving business and customer service, or of retaining staff valued for particular sets of skills which couldn't be easily replaced.

In effect, as MartinW appears to suggest, problem-solving interventions may well be the process towards which the current government (and its Thatcherite/Tebbit/Young 1980s predecessor) effectively support in lieu of legislative controls.

While there appears to be no objective reason why both can't be pursued in tandem, the chocies of safety professionals are conditioned by the results of the electorate's aggregative preferences.
cliveg  
#20 Posted : 11 November 2012 14:03:11(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
cliveg

Hello
I really think folk should look at the bigger picture here.

The part of this that should be ringing alarm bells is:-

The clause also provides a power to amend other health and safety legislation which does not fall into these categories, enabling the policy to be extended should this be required in the future.

It is a blank cheque to sweep away any regulation the minister doesn't like the look of, and that minister (which ever party that may be) will not have to refer the matter to Parliament. Just like FFI, the minister could bring it in with a simple signature.

This could fundamentally undermine the whole legal basis for H&S in this country. The only possible brake would be the EU - but if this country gets an opt out from various sections of Euro law, this may go too.

As Ray says, I just hope their Lordships are awake on Wednesday evening!
johnmurray  
#21 Posted : 12 November 2012 00:54:59(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

They have no chance of getting an opt-out. They are going to have a fight to keep the ones they have negotiated.
In fact they are in a bit of a quandary. Since the EU knows that none of them REALLY want out (they are just threatening with no intention) they are going to give them a kicking in the future.
The fun part is that the UK is going to be marginalised with respect to decision making, while having no choice but to accept and comply with the rules.
Look on the EU as a brake on the govs intention to marginalise the slaves: Us.
boblewis  
#22 Posted : 12 November 2012 09:30:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

John

When we move into opt outs etc we move into high politics and the labyrinthine world of politicians judging where the next alliance is. Labour, Conservative etc etc are all at it. Can you see any more unlikely alliance than in Northern Ireland?

Whether politicians can use the ministerial powers to remove other than strict liability in other areas of law or extend it to repealing of any legislation will be one to haunt the supreme court when it is challenged. At this time however strict liability and restrictions on access to the courts in the case of accidents is a real problem. IOSH really ought to have seen the change coming and become involved in the debate. Instead members all joined the chatter about claims culture and pumped up the bandwagon to make access to justice harder. Many still join this group as we try to make capital out of what are considered unwarranted claims. We need to face the real management inadequacies not simply make blame of employee statements or claims of fraud.

In fact we do need to get some research undertaken into the actual level of Fraudulent claims because these really should be the point at issue. I suspect that the percentages will be a lot less than we realise. The fact that claim numbers increase is perhaps due to two factors - Ability to access the courts and Increasin gly poor management practices.

Bob
chris42  
#23 Posted : 12 November 2012 10:08:51(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
chris42

As a side note it is interesting how things come together. Earlier this year, fairly quite changes to legislation with respect to the benefit system were made and came into force in October. One of the changes involves when you may be able to claim job seekers allowance if you either quit your job or are fired following misconduct. If you quit your job then you cannot claim for 13 weeks, the second time you do it 26 weeks and the third time 3 years. Ok fair enough you should not just quit your job, but what if you take a job with a company that are not so compliant with H&S. You have a choice now to carry on doing work you feel puts you in danger or go without food etc for 13 weeks.

So while removing rights in some circumstances to be compensated if you are harmed, you also can not vote with your feet and get yourself out of there very easily. The best you can do is try to get another job asap, but that is not easy at the moment.

It is hard to say exactly how much effect this will all have, but they wouldn’t be doing it if they thought it wouldn’t have some effect. Odd I have not seen anything from IOSH or in SHP with regard to this, perhaps I missed it.

PS I agree with your post #22 Bob.
johnmurray  
#24 Posted : 12 November 2012 16:52:24(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

@22/Bob:

http://www2.warwick.ac.u...search_finds_spiralling/

I know, it's union and a bit in the past.
The government is not going to do it, or pay for it, because they're on an agenda.
The IOSH is not going to do it, ditto.
Members on here are, by and large, anti-union and anti-union-rep.
Another thing about revoking laws they cannot, is that the EU will do the "court" thing anyway...so not so much the offended person/group.
None of "them" want out of the EU otherwise we would be given a straight IN/OUT offer in a referendum. The figures show about 70% would vote OUT...so that won't be the question.
Probably we'll be offered a "shall we renegotiate" poll.....which of course we can't do anyway WITHOUT first proffering a "we want out" ticket under article 60 (or 50...whatever) of the Lisbon Treaty....that'll not be done then.
Still, there is always the chance they'll just forget about us and go their own happy way....
boblewis  
#25 Posted : 12 November 2012 17:53:53(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

Todays polititcians probably trump the most devious of the Tudor courts practitioners, including Robert Cecil and Francis Walsingham. Self seeking and self serving to themselves as a class to the detriment yutimately of the weak, which includes all taxpayers.

Bob
johnmurray  
#26 Posted : 12 November 2012 18:15:25(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

And all we have between their fantasies and our lives are the EU ?
Choices, choices.
RayRapp  
#27 Posted : 12 November 2012 20:25:24(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

quote=chris42]As a side note it is interesting how things come together. Earlier this year, fairly quite changes to legislation with respect to the benefit system were made and came into force in October. One of the changes involves when you may be able to claim job seekers allowance if you either quit your job or are fired following misconduct. If you quit your job then you cannot claim for 13 weeks, the second time you do it 26 weeks and the third time 3 years. Ok fair enough you should not just quit your job, but what if you take a job with a company that are not so compliant with H&S. You have a choice now to carry on doing work you feel puts you in danger or go without food etc for 13 weeks.

So while removing rights in some circumstances to be compensated if you are harmed, you also can not vote with your feet and get yourself out of there very easily. The best you can do is try to get another job asap, but that is not easy at the moment.

It is hard to say exactly how much effect this will all have, but they wouldn’t be doing it if they thought it wouldn’t have some effect. Odd I have not seen anything from IOSH or in SHP with regard to this, perhaps I missed it.

PS I agree with your post #22 Bob.


Not forgetting that this government slipped in legislation increasing the qualifying period for unfair dismissal from one year to 2 years April of this year. Of course if you resign instead of getting dismissed you could get £470,000 if you work for a government agency!
pete48  
#28 Posted : 12 November 2012 20:38:29(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
pete48

I must admit to finding some of the contortions of our legal system confusing at the best of times so I would like to pose the following questions to those who do better understand such matters.
If some of the opinions expressed here are proven to be accurate then I can see why there is concern. However, I can easily find plenty of comment /opinion around that says that the proposed change is unlikely to be as significant as suggested here.
The TUC Press Release in October 2012. (Strict Liability in H&S.) informs me that:
“In fact there are very few cases where compensation cases are taken on the basis of strict liability”
“Strict liability is imposed in a very narrow set of specific circumstances as almost all regulation made since 1974 has not had strict liability included.”
There is also opinion around the legal profession that the change will not limit civil claims or significantly affect success but that they will need to be managed differently. For example in the well known case of Stark v Post Office wouldn’t the Employers Liability (Defective Equipment) Act 1969 provide a route rather than the strict liability of PUWER that was applied when the claim was made?
Now those examples probably outline the spectrum of opinion from the CBI to the TUC and back again but which is actually correct?
Is it really going to prove more difficult to successfully claim where there is fault?
RayRapp  
#29 Posted : 12 November 2012 20:53:11(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
RayRapp

Pete

I think somewhere you have got your facts wrong mate. All 'regulatory' legislation is strict liability save for the odd exception. Indeed, you have mentioned one - Stark v Post Office, which is an absolute duty! In short, strict liability is not written into any law but it is interpreted by the Judge because no means rea (guilty mind) is required, only proof of committing an offence eg speeding on the highway.
Phil Grace  
#30 Posted : 13 November 2012 11:56:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Phil Grace

We seem to have strayed far and wide on this one... to return to a couple of points:

"Thousands of claims": The Compensation Recovery Unit gives the following figures for 2011/12:

- Employers Liability claims: 87.350
- Public Liability cliams: 104,863
- Unkown: 2,496

I do not think there are any statistics that would help us determine the likely effect of this change. Whilst my knowledge is anecdotal only I believe by far the majority of EL claims are based on negligence. Since the change will have no impact on thsese claims - and employers believe that the courts favour claimants there is perhaps not going to be much of a change in an employee chances of making a succesful claim.

I'm certainly not convinced that removal of the opportunity to make a claim for breach of statutory duty will result in employers "backing off" from managing risk. My experience is that it can be quite difficult to get employers to meet legal requirements anyway. But I may be wrong!

Phil
cliveg  
#31 Posted : 14 November 2012 18:46:28(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
cliveg

An interesting debate going on in the Lords - at least some of them are unimpressed with both the proposals and the tactics that have been employed in the attempt to bring those proposals into law:-

'Clause 61 deals with health and safety. It is new: it was not introduced in the original Bill in the House of Commons until the Report stage and it has not been properly scrutinised. I advise the Minister that it will receive proper scrutiny in this House. If an employee has an accident at work, the clause will remove from the employer a liability that goes back to 1898, when people were able to claim compensation for an accident in the workplace. It removes that liability because the burden of proof will be on the employee to prove that the employer has been negligent.

When we go out to work in the morning, we all hope that we will come home to our family at night in the same state as when we left. Anyone who has worked in industry—and a number of noble Lords have—will know that industrial accidents happen to workers, who arrive at work fit and well and sometimes never go home. Many, many accidents happen. When I was a union official, certainly about a third of my time was taken up working in this area. To remove this protection and place the burden of responsibility on the employee is a retrograde step, not only for the Government—who may feel that they have not taken the right decision—but for the whole of the country. We lead the way in treating people decently, I hope. If the Bill goes through without changes, that record and many, many years of lobbying and work—much of it cross-party work, accepted by both sides not only in this House but in the other place—will be wiped away. The Bill needs to be severely scrutinised in some areas and I hope that it will leave this House in better condition than it arrived.' says Baroness Dean of Thornton-le-Fylde

We shall see.
cliveg  
#32 Posted : 14 November 2012 18:50:34(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
cliveg

... and Lord McKenzie of Luton is clearly unimpressed!

'As the Association of Personal Injury Lawyers points out, if the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 is amended in accordance with this clause, the law relating to workplace health and safety will be returned to where it was more than a century ago, which is quite unbelievable.'

johnmurray  
#33 Posted : 14 November 2012 23:14:37(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
johnmurray

"My experience is that it can be quite difficult to get employers to meet legal requirements anyway. But I may be wrong!"

It is quite difficult.
To get employers to do anything sometimes.
Meeting their legal requirements is "other planet" stuff in the small biz sector.
In quite a few cases they even fail to belong to the human race !
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