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kdrum  
#1 Posted : 16 July 2014 15:58:46(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
kdrum

Afternoon all, I was informed by a colleague that there was a referendum poll on the IOSH website but I have been unable to find it. Can anyone shed any light on this?
Ciaran Delaney  
#2 Posted : 16 July 2014 16:08:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Ciaran Delaney

Hi there,

Just spoke to the webteam on the phone, there is NO referendum poll anywhere on the website.

Ciarán
fscott  
#3 Posted : 16 July 2014 16:32:45(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
fscott

Just had a thought on this and not sure if anyone will be able to answer. If Scotland votes yes to independence in September what will the impact be on health and safety legislation as it stands? Will an independent Scotland stay with the UK legislation or will the Scottish Government have to approve their own legislation?
Ciaran Delaney  
#4 Posted : 16 July 2014 16:38:51(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Ciaran Delaney

What happened in Ireland initially is that Ireland transposed a lot of pre-existing UK legislation into Irish law and then over time created its own legislation

This could well happen if Scotland votes for independence.

Hope that may help.

Ciarán
fscott  
#5 Posted : 16 July 2014 16:43:36(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
fscott

Thanks Ciaran. I had never thought of what impact the independence referendum may have in this sense and as I work in general compliance covering h&s, environmental and employment it could be a nightmare.
chris.packham  
#6 Posted : 16 July 2014 16:43:54(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
chris.packham

What the new independent Scotland would do will be up to them. However, assuming that they become members of the EU (not a certainty by any means) then they will have to adopt all the health and safety Directives and regulations, e.g. REACH, CLP, GHS, etc. so ultimately there may not be a great deal of difference. Even Norway, not a member of the EU, has had to adopt 75% of the EU directives and regulations in order to trade with the single market.

Chris
Ciaran Delaney  
#7 Posted : 16 July 2014 16:45:21(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Ciaran Delaney

Honestly, I can't see too many issues arising.
peter gotch  
#8 Posted : 16 July 2014 17:24:13(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
peter gotch

If we don't vote Yes, then the three main parties backing the No campaign have stated that they support an extension to devolution. Likely that this would include health and safety - we already legislate on the environment in Holyrood.
boblewis  
#9 Posted : 16 July 2014 23:20:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

On a more mundane note How many Scottish members will become foreign nationals with a YES vote?
jwk  
#10 Posted : 17 July 2014 13:15:17(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
jwk

Interesting question Bob. I've considered volunteering to stay with the new Scottish organisation which my employer would have to develop in the event of a Yes vote. Call me old-fashioned but I actually like things like the EU and the Convention on Human Rights,

John
boblewis  
#11 Posted : 17 July 2014 13:24:35(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

JWK

But who is to say an Independent Scotland can join the EU. Spain will certainly be against such a move because of the Catalan situation. Other EU members have problems with specific nationalistic communities within their borders such as Macedonia and Greece etc. Scotland leaving the UK and still being able to join the EU would be a dangerous precedent if allowed entry.
colinreeves  
#12 Posted : 17 July 2014 13:38:01(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
colinreeves

Bob

This is one of the many unanswered questions!

Of interest, the Yes campaign have been saying how much Scotland can be an independent nation and using Norway as a glowing example. And yet Norway is outwith the EU (although as noted above influenced by them) but the Yes campaign do not seem to see the strangeness of being like Norway, but in the EU. It is not possible.

jwk  
#13 Posted : 17 July 2014 14:21:43(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
jwk

Bob, agreed to an extent, though Macedonia is a somewhat different kettle of fish. Scotland may not be able to join immediately, but I don't think if they wished to join they would be prevented indefinitely, and probably not for long. Still, I'd rather live somewhere where the governing institutions embraced the concept of Europe.

Colin, nothing wrong with wanting to be an independent wealthy state like Norway but remain within the EU, maybe if they used the examples of Finland or Denmark the comparison would be clearer,

John
gramsay  
#14 Posted : 17 July 2014 14:27:58(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
gramsay

Whatever happens, in the event of a Yes vote we'll have 18 months to thrash out transitional details.

Dozens of other states have managed this, and as far H&S goes (thankfully!) the UK-originated rules stemming from the test of reasonable practicability have a long history of case law in an already entirely-Scottish jurisdiction, as well as a dedicated H&S legal team within the Scottish Procurator Fiscal's office.

Personally I think the question of how we continue to control risks to H&S is one of the more trivial issues we'll face!
kdrum  
#15 Posted : 17 July 2014 14:28:19(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
kdrum

Thanks Ciaran, I did some more searching and found details on the local branch pages. It has now closed but no results available as yet
walker  
#16 Posted : 18 July 2014 08:50:53(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
walker

What I want to know is when are we going to get a referendum for independence from the place bordered by the M25.
I lived in Scotland for many years and believe most of the folks there who might vote yes, really want independence from this area rather than the rest of the UK.
Monitor  
#17 Posted : 18 July 2014 10:26:25(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Monitor

I would expect that all of the legislation would remain until gradually replaced by new "Scots Acts".

The comments regarding Scotland's status in the EU that contributors have made are unhelpful. The fact is that all 5.3 million Scots would remain citizens of the EU, on account of dual nationality if nothing else. (Whether the rUK would remain in the EU post-2017 is conjecture.) It is citizenship that determines the status of the individual. Much has been said of accession periods prior to EU entry via the mainstream press, although this ignores the fact that Scottish laws, economy etc have been tailored to the European model for the last 40 years, and therefore an accession period would serve no useful purpose. Might I remind all that 16 million citizens of the former East Germany became EU citizens, without an accession period, despite having been part of a failed communist state. An administrative entry procedure is envisaged to permit the formalisation of Scotland as an EU country.

Mention has been made of Catelonia. This is a Spanish province, and is not a country by definition. My understanding is that the Spanish government sees Scotland and Catelonia as two different situations and has no objection to Scotland becoming a member of the EU provided that lawful processes are followed.

Interestingly, the duty to set up Scotland as an EU member rests with the UK, since only UK ministers have the power, similarly with currency, in the event of a yes vote.


IOSH members who work in Scotland may wish to familiarise themselves with the Barnett Formula, currently used to determine the size of the Scottish budget. There are some issues regarding the maintenance of Barnett in the event of a no vote. This is particularly relevant for those members in the public services.


boblewis  
#18 Posted : 18 July 2014 12:12:10(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

Monitor

A world of Ifs Buts and Maybes. Sorry if my comments are unhelpful but as an independent nation it would be up to Scotland to request membership of the EU not the UK parliament. The fact that citizens may have dual nationality does not mean that the country itself can claim such a privilege. Personally I have no view on yes or no but a yes vote for independence has to mean just that, not a reliance on support from the remaining UK.
imwaldra  
#19 Posted : 18 July 2014 12:19:11(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
imwaldra

I realise that those not resident in Scotland may not feel to engaged with this, but some of us who are have been 'working the issues' for a while.

Last year Scottish Govt. civil servants ran a series of stakeholder meetings (invitation only!) each covering one area that's currently reserved. I was among those who attended the one on H&S - several other IOSH members were there too. It was a worthwhile exercise, including a session inviting us to 'imagine' how we would set things up it we had a clean sheet. There's a follow-up meeting next month, so we may hear more?

One hot topic for me is how major hazard facilities would be regulated, on- and offshore, as I judge it's unlikely Scotland alone would ever have sustainable specialist resources to devise the legislation and inspect against the resulting standards for the very wide range of issues that are involved. At the IOSH Holyrood reception to commemorate Piper last year the SNP Energy Minister told me they would just maintain the current arrangements. But since then I've heard other possibilities being raised.

Re the poll, it was organised by one Branch but I've heard the way it was done (by another organisation) meant the results were not suitable for publishing.

Hally  
#20 Posted : 18 July 2014 16:32:45(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Hally

Would suggest no-one asks a Catalan about them being a Spanish 'province'...

They consider themselves Catalan not Spanish, and of course the Spanish government thinks it is different from Scotland, if they lost Catalunya to independence, they lose one of their major (top one or two areas i think with the Basque country) so more scared of losing one of their major economic outputs.

Anyway, less of the political side of it, got to agree that very little is likely to change as others have said and will more than likely be refinements.

Think Walker mentioned about being independent of the M25 region, could be close with that, i think its not just Scotland that would like to get away from that.
Steve e ashton  
#21 Posted : 19 July 2014 14:55:12(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Steve e ashton

In contrast to what many have said - I think there could be significant impacts (positive) if the YES campaign succeeds.... I believe there is a genuine 'Scottish' ethos of fairness that is simple absent from UK politics at the moment. I cannot see a Scottish Govt of any persuasion getting away with the kind of trivial tripe that Cameron and Milliband have been coming up with about red tape, removing burdens, exempting self employed removal of 'breach of stat duty' claims through ERRA and so on and so forth. I suspect Scotland's approach to H&S (and care for vulnerable members of society in general) would rapidly diverge from the increasingly common-man-hostile and uncaring approach adopted at Westmonster.
Steve e ashton  
#22 Posted : 19 July 2014 14:58:01(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Steve e ashton

And that last word was a genuine typo... But I really like the way it came out!... Have to stress I guess - the above is a very personal view and does not represent the views of my family, my employer, the guys I argue with down the pub or anyone else....
mssy  
#23 Posted : 19 July 2014 16:16:40(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
mssy

The yes group and SNP say that a new Scotland would become nuclear free.

I wonder what the 1000s of employees at Faslane (Nuclear sub base & Scotland's largest single site employer) and Coulport (Nuclear missile storage facility 2 miles away) will make of that?

Plus, where will the subs and their support infrastructure go? Its nonsense and will never happen, and demonstrates one out of many scare stories doing the rounds to persuade Scots which way to vote

boblewis  
#24 Posted : 20 July 2014 15:11:32(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
boblewis

I will have to nail my colours to one political mast however that would probably have solved many of these issues. Of course Charles Edward Stuart should have succeeded to the English throne and not the usurpers from Holland and Germany. The political picture would have been very different with a Scottish royal family on the throne. Culloden would not be the source of pain and the world wars may never have occurred.

East Germany joining a member state is very different to part of a member country ceding to Independence. Equally Spain will only do what suits their political needs - the needs of Scotland are not on their horizon.

Back to the thread though I can foresee it will be a very different world for H&S
Monitor  
#25 Posted : 23 July 2014 10:48:06(UTC)
Rank: New forum user
Monitor

It's worth looking at the mechanism for bringing an indy Scotland into existence, since some folk are unaware.

In the tabloid-world, the process goes like this:

Scotland physically detaches itself from the rest of Britain, drifts across the North Sea and joins up with Spitsbergen. Scottish Ministers then have to sort out a currency whilst dealing with supranational issues, such as the EU.

In the real world, a yes vote is a request for UK Ministers to establish Scotland as an independent state. The duty to establish a currency and deal with the EU is a (non) problem for them. All this would take place in the glare of international publicity, with politicians behaving at their best. That way, from day one of indy, Scotland has a currency plus its supranational arrangements sorted out. No borders due to the common travel area.

Legally, Scotland's share of UK debt is zero, its legacy state pension obligations are zero, and its obligation to house WMD is zero. Obviously, there is a negotiation to be had here, and I would expect that an agreement on currency union would follow since those zeros would not be to the liking of HM Treasury.

What is useful is to have a view on the "no" future. I would invite comment from the forum. Would it involve the maintenance of the Scottish budget, currently determined via the Barnett Formula? What about the right to strike? What about continued membership of the EU?

Something to think about, as the referendum is just around the corner. Thanks.
MrsBlue  
#26 Posted : 23 July 2014 11:08:48(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Guest

Ask a Scotsman, Irishman, Welshman are they British and to a man/woman they answer Scots, Irish, Welsh first. The English are pretty much split on the subject.

Now, I'm just hoping the Scots do vote to go independent so my English taxes will then stay in England. They should then have there own currency, own everything and not leach off us English who have carried them for centuries - my Scottish wife agrees.

Rich
Steve e ashton  
#27 Posted : 23 July 2014 14:53:05(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Steve e ashton

"They should then have there own currency, own everything and not leach off us English who have carried them for centuries"... And that, ladies and gentlemen, boys and girls, is why so many in Scotland are currently deciding to vote yes. The combination of arrogance and ignorance on display is positively breathtaking.

MrsBlue  
#28 Posted : 23 July 2014 15:08:05(UTC)
Rank: Guest
Guest

steve e ashton

Read your history - one example: part of the council tax I pay to an English County goes to Scotland. Tell me how that is right?

Anyway you may not decide to answer seeing as my question has bog all to do with the original post.

But, perhaps our dear moderators may let it go on Friday (even if they pull it now).

Rich
lwthesm  
#29 Posted : 23 July 2014 16:02:24(UTC)
Rank: Forum user
lwthesm

Now now boys, play nicely.

Just to nail my colours.......

I am Scottish, Scottish to the core of my being. My parents are Scottish, my grandparents were Scottish.
I live in Wales, I haven't lived in Scotland for about 30yrs. My parents both still live there as does my brother, nephew, aunts and uncles and cousins. Just because I live somewhere else doesn't make me less Scottish.

If Scotland votes yes I will still be Scottish, a no vote doesn't change that. I don't have a vote but would be very sad indeed if we weren't all part of the UNITED Kingdom on 19th September.
Steve e ashton  
#30 Posted : 23 July 2014 16:05:23(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
Steve e ashton

Rich: I really must apologise for the intemperate language - sorry.

If you want to know where your English council tax goes - I want to know where the Scottish oil taxes have gone... I might believe the Westminster oil revenues have been higher than the Barnet Formula allowed for.. and by quite a substantial margin.

But you're right this isn't really the right forum for this discussion.

And I will understand if my previous post is pulled by the mods. sorry again.
moderator 4  
#31 Posted : 23 July 2014 16:24:27(UTC)
Rank: Moderator
moderator 4

As this topic is mainly concerned with non-H&S issues, we have decided to lock it against further contributions.

Moderating Team
colinreeves  
#32 Posted : 23 July 2014 16:25:21(UTC)
Rank: Super forum user
colinreeves

fscott wrote:
Just had a thought on this and not sure if anyone will be able to answer. If Scotland votes yes to independence in September what will the impact be on health and safety legislation as it stands? Will an independent Scotland stay with the UK legislation or will the Scottish Government have to approve their own legislation?


Going back to an early point - the document issued by the Scottish Government on independence says on page 364 "establish a ... Scottish Health & Safety body".
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