Stuie, I feel I score strongly on ethical behaviour (at least my psychometrics suggest so!), but to ask “what are we hiding?” is, I feel, missing some of the point.
I’m sure you know this, but for those who don’t: RIDDOR reports are one of the often purely statistical criteria that many businesses are measured on, both in procuring new work and maintaining existing contracts.
In tendering for new work, if our RIDDOR incident rate is above whatever “x” the client decides, then that will put our tender submissions at a disadvantage at best, and exclude them at worst. In these situations, there is rarely an opportunity to “explain” the individual incidents (if that is, indeed, possible).
Additionally, one large contract we have specifies the “reportable incident rate” above which we put our continued employment at risk.
It’s brutal and it’s wrong to my mind but, and this is the crux, it’s there in black and white, we’ve signed up to it, we have no option.
Having said all that, RIDDOR plays no direct part in how we manage our H&S. We prefer to act on Lost Time incidents (LTis) as the 7-day cut-off feels like it’s just a line someone has drawn in the sand: it’s possible to have lots of LTis without having a single RIDDOR.
So when: there may be 200 jobs at risk (as in my case) if I get it wrong; when the legislation is so open to interpretation that even in here, as professionals, we can’t provide a definitive answer; then it’s no wonder that, without hiding anything or being evasive, some people hesitate to report and certainly don’t report “just in case”. Heck, the evaders aren’t posting on here, for heaven’s sake, they’re out there injuring people and ignoring that particular regulation. Absolute fact.
So, while always reporting when I need to, I’d rather have the discussion with the HSE about why I’d interpreted the wooly regs wrong than have the discussion with the DWP about what time I have to sign on next week (and have to imagine that discussion being had by 200 or so former colleagues).
(and, by the way, our LTi rate is currently zero, so this is not an excuse for poor statistics on our part!)
Was that a rant? Then it’s over.
Brian.
;-)