Posted By Sean Fraser
Ken,
I totally agree with your points about Standards seeking the lowest common denominator, but I feel that the same principle often applies to laws as well and this was why I was questioning the legislative route which is often seen by some (out there in the general public [read "media" as appropriate], not necessarily ourselves) as being the panacea they seek - that so often turns out not the case once it is enacted.
I agree that good law makes up in many ways for a lot of the less-good laws (I hesitate to say poor), but I also question the costs that are inevitably involved. Most laws that have any significant impact (good or bad) will entail cost - to the body/ies required to comply with it, the body/ies required to enforce it or both. We already know that the HSE funding situation is leading (arguably) to a poorer service in terms of enforcement, although I think their access to information and advice is superb, expecially with current technology such as the Internet. Imposing an additional requirement on them or the LA or even the police means more cost to them and the headache of utilising diminishing resources for one more requirement - with the result that it isn't done as effectively as originally anticipated while other existing requirements suffer from a diversion of priority in the meantime. Add to this the case for raising taxes (local or national) that would actually be required to do it properly in the first place and seldom seem to follow, except indirectly and without adequate justification. Politically, I am a proponent of ring-fenced taxes, justifying exactly where proportions of taxes collected will go, but that is a separate debate altogether.
Safety awareness leads, we all agree, to overall cost reduction, in the same way that good health helps our NHS by reducing demand on reactive services and thereby providing more preventive services as a result in an upward spiral - a fine ideal but difficult to manage in a truly democratic society where freedom of choice is as important as freedom of information.
Which brings me onto home safety programmes - again, an laudible concept but are we not now encroaching into a more dodgy area of right to privacy? Making businesses safe is a pre-requisite that no-one can argue - if you want to do business then you need to do it safely and provide safe products/services. But could we do more than encourage people to be aware of safety and health at home and actually prescribe it? After all (and apologies to my fellow Scots - this is a recognised phrase after all) an Englishmans home is his castle. Although I recognise that the call is not to dictate safety in the home and all that entails, I feel that a legal obligation on LA's to promote safety is one where those who are already struggling to cope with funding as it is or do not see safety as their priority over, say, environment (for which there are defined targets to achieve), it will be the bare minimum again. Sometimes I think the half-hearted approach is a lot worse than no approach at all! Perhaps we should change an existing law to have businesses promote home safety - after all, they have daily contact with their employees!! This spreads the cost, can be easily demonstrated and would give a wide covereage of the working population. It isn't blanket, but it would be workable. I know of at least one Oil major that promotes home safety and has provided a checklist for interested parties to use at home. Maybe this would be a better route to promote home safety - LAs would then have to do it as a matter of course internally, and many of them are in the top 5 of employers in terms of employee numbers in any given area anyway.
There are a number of agencies and bodies that promote home safety already, including local and national governments - I would need to be persuaded that a legal requirement upon the LAs would imporve what is already being done, to any significant degree.
I don't disagree with your sentiments. I just query if we are geting the various balances right.
Would anyone from the LAs like to express an opinion on what a legally required safety promotion campaign would consist of and whether it would be effective, i.e. how it would be measured? Or is that a topic for a separate thread?