Rank: Super forum user
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I am intrigued by the proposed removal of L21 the Management regs ACOP. And specifically the need to conduct a “Risk Assessment”, encompassed in the ACOP section attached to reg 3. The actual regulation does not require a “risk assessment” to be produced, merely for the employer to make a “suitable and sufficient assessment” and so forth. It is only in the ACOP that the need to produce a “risk assessment” is made.
What is my point? Well, I have a hunch that the need to write a risk assessment can and often does become a block to actually assessing risk in a given situation. It becomes a formulaic, process bound piece of work that all too often becomes a problem as work proceeds. The need to provide detailed RA’s BEFORE a contract is let, the files of RA’s that we know sit on office shelves unread, the constant requests for “templates” in these august chat rooms…..
Perhaps the removal of the ACOP detail will allow a more holistic, imaginative risk based approach to assessing the risks employers introduce to the workplace and to employees?
I am NOT advocating getting rid of Risk Assessments whole sale, simply saying the processes and need to record everything “just in case” can be a burdensome and in many cases inefficient way to identify and manage risk; the words and intention in the reg itself are sufficient guidance, the ACOP is an extra (and costly) straight jacket that restricts proper risk and hazard control. Maybe the removal of the ACOP should be welcomed?
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Rank: Super forum user
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Regulation 3 (6) requires that the significant findings are recorded - that's not changed there's just no guidance now on what this means!
Well no guidance from the enforcement agencies any way!
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Rank: Super forum user
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Brian,
Your point is accepted, but, it does not say significant risk should be recorded in a specific Risk Assessment document. There are other ways and documents where significant risk can be recorded,
Jim
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Rank: Super forum user
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We will find out just how useful an ACOP is when in court as without one you have no guide to measure against - removal makes things easier for lawyers to get richer and for the HSE to obtain fees
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Rank: Super forum user
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Bob
I've no doubt your observation about 'no guide to measure against' is well intentioned yet it's not entirely valid.
In many respects, the absence of a guide in legalese can actually support Loftstedt's advocacy of scientifically based safety, with scientifically validated standards and guidelines becoming relevant guides that are well beyond the domain of merely legal interpretations.
For example, the Handbook of Standards and Guidelines in Ergonomics and Human Factors ed. W Karwowski, CRC Press, 2006, has many entries directly relevant to safety practice, just as the ACOP to which you refer also includes numerous paragraphs that are rooted in ergonomic research.
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Rank: Super forum user
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ExDeeps wrote:
Your point is accepted, but, it does not say significant risk should be recorded in a specific Risk Assessment document. There are other ways and documents where significant risk can be recorded,
Neither the ACOP nor the regulations require the recording of significant findings to be in any particular format. Removing the ACOP does not change this, in my view.
It is only when H&S bods overload the term 'risk assessment' as meaning some particular likelihood x severity approach that this requirement materialises. That requirement is not in the ACOP, so removing teh ACOP does not remove the requirement. It is not in the regulations.
Removing the ACOP makes alternative forms of recording significant findings neither more nor less likely.
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Rank: Super forum user
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OK - not that I'm trying to be controversial but it is Friday...
I have always been intrigued by the almost universal 'you gotta do a risk assessment'.. With the always implied (and often stated) corollary that you need to reduce the risk... But my reading of the Regs has never agreed with this interpretation... The Regs are quite clear for me that the ONLY reason you are doing the assessment is "for the purpose of identifying the measures he needs to take to comply with the
requirements and prohibitions imposed upon him by or under the relevant statutory
provisions and by Part II of the Fire Precautions (Workplace) Regulations 1997."
[query - why has the reference to the FP(W) regs not yet been updated in the L21 on HSE's website?]
In other words - if there are no "requirements or prohibitions" imposed by "relevant statutory provisions" - then you don't need to do anything else (under these regs...). There is no general duty to assess risks with a view to reducing them (except in so far as this is 'implied' by H&S@WetcA)... All you are required to do by this regulation is to find out what laws apply.....
Which is a very different task to assessing and recording significant findings of all hazards....
What do others think here? I believe that removing the ACoP - which only confused the issue by suggesting there was an obligation to assess and reduce - is a good step, because it throws us back to the 'so far as is reasonably' etc of the parent Act - which is better worded and should (by now) be better understood...
Just a thought.
Steve
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Rank: Super forum user
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I'm very wary of discussion of Reg3 in isolation. Regulations 4, 5 and Schedule 1 are also relevant to the overall required approach.
I entirely agree that the fault for the knee-jerk "got to do a risk assessment" doesn't lie with L21 or HSE guidance. Neither has there ever been a prescribed format or method (other that Reg4 /Schedule 1 principles to be applied to controls).
IMO at least some of the blame lies with NEBOSH Certificate and, more so these days, due to pressures from Insurers, Claims companies and Major Contractor Groups.
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Rank: Forum user
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Oh for a 'like' button to save my weary fingers! XDeeps, achrn, RH
The H&S profession - including IOSH and especially the NEBOSH Certificate - have made RA into a monster.
Would like to think that the changes will be positive, but I fear the path is too long and deeply trodden . .
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Rank: Super forum user
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Sadlass
Your view 'Would like to think that the changes will be positive, but I fear the path is too long and deeply trodden' was common 25 years ago (1988) within the emerging HR profession, the year I became a member of what was then the IPM.
The IPM merged with the IPD to become the IPD and in time the CIPD which with 130,000 members has now announced an alliance with the CIMA to form a 330,000 alliance. Along with the surge in numbers, there's been a total restructuring in accreditation and a refreshed much more entrepreneurial culture that reflects changes in digitalisation, globalisation, steadily improved measurement of people and processes and organisational/personal development.
Comparable changes are foreseeable within OSH where the main barrier is probably the relatively low level of statistical literacy, which stalls the scientifically based safety management that Loftstedt advocated.
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Rank: Forum user
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While not wanting to be controversial... I'm shocked at the number of posts on here asking for "a risk assessment for XXX", as if RA is a "thing" that has to be on the bookshelf, rather than a process that has to be performed.
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Rank: Super forum user
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stillp wrote:While not wanting to be controversial... I'm shocked at the number of posts on here asking for "a risk assessment for XXX", as if RA is a "thing" that has to be on the bookshelf, rather than a process that has to be performed.
Precisely my thinking and one of the reasons for my OP. Why should an engineering workshop have countless RA's for the machines and work undertaken. A competant engineering manager (advised by a knowledgable safety profesional?) will have a policy etc to cover gaurding, competant staff, work processes. A risk assessment adds not a lot
Jim
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Rank: Super forum user
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I too spend time trying to explain to people that risk assessment is not a form to be completed but a process to be carried out. I don’t care about the form, whether it starts life as blank sheet of paper or an Excel or Word proforma
I can’t see the point of a risk matrix that tells you that something might be safe (review risk assessment after 6 months- what’s all that about?)
A risk assessment is a simple process to look at a piece of work and for the users to decide whether it is safe or not.
The problems occurs when the someone sues the employer and the first question you get asked is “Show us the risk assessment for this activity.” And if you don’t have a piece of paper to wave around in the air the impression you are given is that you are doomed.
Actually the risk assessment is only relevant if the claimant can establish that the inadequacy of the assessment actually directly led to the injury.
In most case I have come across the RA is neither here or there, it’s the controls that matter no the RA in most cases.
So we spend time filling in forms for others.
Try to approach risk assessment in a rational manner but when our workers go onto another employer’s site we get lumbered with pages of irrelevant bilge designed by some one in an office who has no idea about what we are doing.
Rant over.
It’s the heat about 28 C with 60% humidity.
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Rank: Forum user
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ExDeeps, I'm not convinced that we are thinking the same way, although I might be misucnderstanding you. My point was that your competent engineering manager needs to assess the risks in his workplace, and not to just "have a policy" or "have a RA".
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Rank: Super forum user
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I agree completely that risk assessment is a process, but the format a written assessment has never been specified by L21, its always been the requirement to record the significant findings and it still is. I don't see how removing L21 will change this?
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Rank: Super forum user
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A Kurdziel wrote:It’s the heat about 28 C with 60% humidity.
May i refer you to the thread "Thermal Comfort Risk Assessment" ;-)
Jim
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Rank: Super forum user
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stillp wrote:ExDeeps, I'm not convinced that we are thinking the same way, although I might be misucnderstanding you. My point was that your competent engineering manager needs to assess the risks in his workplace, and not to just "have a policy" or "have a RA".
stillp, we are on the same page - I agree with you, all I am saying is the "Risk Assessment" format may not be best suited to recording the outcome of assessing the risks in some scenarios...Maybe a policy or some other record is better.
Jim
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Rank: Super forum user
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ExDeeps wrote:stillp wrote:While not wanting to be controversial... I'm shocked at the number of posts on here asking for "a risk assessment for XXX", as if RA is a "thing" that has to be on the bookshelf, rather than a process that has to be performed.
Precisely my thinking and one of the reasons for my OP. Why should an engineering workshop have countless RA's for the machines and work undertaken. A competant engineering manager (advised by a knowledgable safety profesional?) will have a policy etc to cover gaurding, competant staff, work processes. A risk assessment adds not a lot
Jim
I am still a bit warm
I do have concerns about throwing the risk assessment baby out with the bathwater.
I believe that the process is important and should be carried out. The example that ExDEpps gave “A competent engineering manager (advised by a knowledgeable safety professional?) will have a policy etc to cover guarding, competent staff, work processes. A risk assessment adds not a lot” begs the question how does he know that their policy covers all of the risks eg there might be risk outside the knowledge base of a ‘competent engineering manager’ such as hazardous substances or the biological risk from cooling fluids etc. Someone would need to carry out something an awful like a risk assessment to make sure that all the appropriate controls are in place.
But it should not be a long winded form filling process- risk assessment for walking up stairs is not required.
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Rank: Forum user
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Agreed. RA is something you do, not something you have.
My pet hate on this forum is the common requests for a risk assessment fo some task, or, worse, an RA for someone with mobility problems, epilepsy or similar, as if there could be a "one size fits all" solution. I appreciate that in many cases these posters are just asking for help, but I'd have more sympathy if they were asking for, e.g., a list of hazards associated with a particular activity, or guidance on how epilepsy affects the risks to be considered.
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