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#1 Posted : 14 January 2004 13:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tony Birchall Alot of local press contain details of available jobs in the occupation of health and safety. Many require a minimum of a Nebosh Certificate to recruit a person in a full time health and safety role. I am trying to find some convincing guidance that suggests that if someone is in charge of their company's health and safety, then it is perhaps better and cheaper for the employer that if they recruit an individual to have key responsibility (deemed competent to the enforcing authority, by virtue of both qualification and experience), then they should opt to go for the better qualified to undertake this role. It limits embarrassment in the long run if things go wrong, and it saves initial costs to re-develop persons with further expensive training (Diplomas etc)and more time out of work for training. Get it right in the first place is the message I'm trying to get across!
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#2 Posted : 14 January 2004 13:50:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Abbott Nice idea. One question: How do people like me get experience in your view? I work in an office of 235+ staff. I am the only Health & Safety Advisor. I have 1 Nebosh Cert and 1 Diploma Level 3 in Health & Safety - yet I'm not considered, by your argument, to be suitably qualified for my position (The Diploma I hold is not recognised by IOSH). There are benefits to what you say, and every company should think about adopting a RFT (Right First Time) attitude - but in practice, I think it more important to encourage young safety semi-professionals to flourish in new roles, and allow them to train, with time off or not as the case maybe. Companies that invest in their people, both in terms of "taking a risk" on basic qualifications and by agree to help with training to further the career of the respective staff member, get much more out of their employees, promote a good company image, and get my vote! Regards Chris
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#3 Posted : 14 January 2004 13:58:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tony Birchall Sorry Chris, I probably put that wrongly. The point what I am trying to put across is why advertise a position at 15k with Nebosh Certificate when you know you are going to have to outlay 4 or 5 thousand pounds to put them through either the Diploma or NVQ route. Develop your own yes, but you are unlikely to attract the best at the 15k Nebosh Cert? I don't doubt you know your business.
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#4 Posted : 14 January 2004 15:34:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Abbott It's cool Tony! :) Actually from what you've just said, the point is well made. I do sometimes wish I had a more experienced H&S Professional here that I could bounce ideas off... Thankfully, I have this forum! Chris
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#5 Posted : 14 January 2004 15:49:00(UTC)
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Posted By Peter Lee Interestingly Regultation 7 of the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999 state that "a person shall be regarded as competent for the purposes of paragraph 1 where he has sufficient TRAINING and EXPERIENCE and OTHER QUALITIES." No mention of Diplomas Degrees or Professional Memberships. I believe there is a role to play for people with the Certificate I know of damn good safety advisors with this level of qualifications because I have 2 Diplomas does that make me more "Competent" than him, I wouldnt agree.
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#6 Posted : 14 January 2004 15:50:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tony Birchall No matter how good a person thinks they are, it's always wiser to ask someone else if you don't know, or resource the information elsewhere. You have to identify your own limitations.
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#7 Posted : 14 January 2004 16:14:00(UTC)
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Posted By Sean Fraser That's always been my definition of competence - knowing when to ask! This subject comes up time and again, and the only answer is that there is no answer. It comes down to what the employer deems acceptable. Obviously this is only ever likely to be tested in court, and this is the scenario one should consider when pondering this matter - is the knowledge and experience of the person advising me on health and safety matters proportionate to the hazards and risks involved in our operations? Complexity of tasks / operations, the nature of the hazards and the risk of harm should these be realised will determine the answer. There is another issue as well - there is an assumption that the staffer who is dealing with the routine H&S matters is also acting as the advisor, but this might not be the case. The staffer might be in an administrative role, with experts being called in as required to advise and inform - this would be where consultants come in by spreading their expertise cost-effectively across a number of clients rather than being dedicated to a single organisation. One size does not fit all by any means.
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#8 Posted : 14 January 2004 16:28:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tony Birchall That's why it's so important to develop a good safety culture in any business - with commitment from the top. Sadly this rarely happens. I recal something published by The Institue of Directors which gave a list of business goals. Members voted on priorities, profit was top. That's understandable. Good health and safety was sadly 9th out of ten!
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#9 Posted : 14 January 2004 21:41:00(UTC)
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Posted By Paul Craythorne Who said that a NEBOSH Diploma makes you more qualified? Paul Craythorne
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#10 Posted : 15 January 2004 08:26:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tony Birchall A Nebosh Diploma does make you more qualified, because if you successfully complete it then you have a qualification do you not? Then again, the same applies with the City and Guilds route or Nottingham Trent Diploma also. The point I was making is that many employers can fool themselves by recruiting someone not as well qualified, pay them less then have to put that person through a more highly intense training programme such as the Diploma or NVQ. It may cost them more in the long run. You may also likely be challenged by the enforcing authority, if things were to go pear shaped at a later date, if you safety adviser is not as well trained as he could be - against the level of risk in the particular workplace.
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#11 Posted : 15 January 2004 09:13:00(UTC)
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Posted By Geoff Burt Tony You've asked a generalised question that only Sean has attempted to answer. It depends on the risks and complexity of the workplace. The certificate is perfectly satisfactory for some workplaces - other companies will need more qualifed personnel. Common sense, isn't it? Geoff
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#12 Posted : 15 January 2004 11:50:00(UTC)
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Posted By Peter Lee Geoff, Trouble is with common sense is that its not common !
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#13 Posted : 15 January 2004 12:12:00(UTC)
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Posted By Geoff Burt You're right, I've broken my own rule of only talking about 'good' sense. Common sense is much less common than is commmonly supposed. Recent comment I saw said ' ... electric shock could lead to a fatal heart attack or even death ..'!
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#14 Posted : 15 January 2004 14:47:00(UTC)
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Posted By Chris Abbott That's almost as bad as the poster I kept from my last company ".. If you have a serious Accident or death, please call Occupational Health for assistance..." Ya......... right...........
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#15 Posted : 15 January 2004 15:59:00(UTC)
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Posted By Paul Craythorne Tony, My point was that a NEBOSH Diploma does not necessarily make you more qualified to do the job. I have a NEBOSH Certificate. Please tell me what type of company I am qualified to provide support/advice to. Paul Craythorne
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#16 Posted : 15 January 2004 16:07:00(UTC)
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Posted By Bev Carter I've read with interest all your comments, all of which I agree with. The crux is that competency is a grey area and therefore cannot be defined. Sure, it makes sense for a company to have the most highly qualified and highly skilled and experienced staff they can get (for whatever position)and this is often reflected in job advertisements where the level of expertise asked for greatly exceeds that necessary to do the job. I'm looking at it from the other view point - in my company I am the so called "competent person" required by the management regs. I was known personally to my employers as I have worked with them at a previous company, so when I was taken on a year ago, I had some H&S experience but no formal qualifications (just in house courses). I did the NEBOSH General Cert this year and would like to do the diploma as I personally do not feel fully competent to do my job to the highest standard (which the workers and company deserve). However, the directors feel that just having the General Cert satisfies the legal requirement of the competent person so that is as far as they will go, particularly as I shot myself in the foot a bit by getting a distinction!
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#17 Posted : 15 January 2004 16:09:00(UTC)
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Posted By Tony Birchall Hands up - yes it is dependent upon the risks associated to your site! There are alot of things covered in a Diploma that are not touched on in the Certificate though.
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#18 Posted : 15 January 2004 16:16:00(UTC)
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Posted By Philip McAleenan Dear All, If we consider that an employer is obliged to engage persons who are competent to carry out their work tasks, then it follows that a person who cannot carry out any work task without causing harm (in its widest sense) to themselves, others or to the company is not a competent worker. An appropriate, and far from grey, definition of competence is "the consistent skilful application of skills and knowledge to any specified work operation", where the use of the term skilful implies conducting the operation to the highest standards within the field. In this there is no dichotomy between the skills required to do a job and health & safety. Competence is as much about the process as it is about the production of an end product, and the skill in getting there requires that no one be unnecessarily exposed to hazards. Viewed correctly, H&S is integral to what a worker does, and not a discrete function that can be ruled, managed or taught separately from their specific area of competence. Regards, Philip
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#19 Posted : 15 January 2004 17:44:00(UTC)
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Posted By Geoff Burt I agree with you Philip but I don't think it is quite what the original question was about. We're talking here about the level of expertise required for a person to advise others. In an ideal world all workers would be qualified (training, experience, qualifications, mental approach) to work efficiently and safely. Until that day comes there is a need for others to know what the rules are, to interpret them, and to advise and monitor. It is the level of the competence of those persons we are addressing - and that level will depend on managerial attitudes, finance (above all it the commercial realities that have to be taken into account), the risks involved and the availability of qualified people to do that job. How else can it be?
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#20 Posted : 16 January 2004 09:09:00(UTC)
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Posted By Sean Fraser We all seem to have left out one major consideration here - I would contend that most of us hold other non-safety qualifications or recognised trades, and that our work in H&S has not been our sole occupation since leaving formative education. For example, I hold a degree in Management - I use what that teaching to understand and anticipate how managers think, so I can at least attempt to explain things in their "language". I would presume that most of us on the forum will be similarly qualified (i.e. engineering, medicine, psychology, law, management, arts, whatever). How much do our base qualifications and experience contribute to our current work methodolgy, and how can that be included in the assessment of competence? I would argue the case that an experienced engineer who is thoroughly familiar with a particular industry and holds a NEBOSH Cert could be deemed more competent because of his specialist knowledge, than a first time graduate holding a degree in OSH. It all comes down to understnading the hazards, the risks and the potential solutions to reduce them ALARP. This is not to say that 30 year veteren is automatically better than another who has only just started out, nor does one qualifiaction necessarily "trump" another. I still stand by my principle that the level of competence is dependent on the nature of the hazards, complexity of risk and the consequences of failure in proportion to the operations. And the competence applies to the individual - not the qualifications they hold. Certificates only confirm that the knowledge has been imparted and to some degree followed by some demonstration of understanding - but it doesn't automatically make someone competent. There is still the experience aspect, and that can mean more than a clutch of degrees - even more so in some cases, as we are all familiar with the stereotype of the nutty professor. Knows his stuff, but absolutely no concept of the practicalities involved. There is more to H&S than just the knowledge.
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#21 Posted : 16 January 2004 12:49:00(UTC)
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Posted By Trudy Clements I personally feel that the people doing the job descriptions and the Directors sometimes have very little understanding of the compentency requirements for Health and Safety advisers. In fact some have very little understanding of their legal obligations. I have seen positions advertised in large complex environments for HS&E managers and the qualificatiion required is only the NEBOSH Certificate. I am all in favour of getting NEBOSH Certificate holders experience but some of them (I have met them) think that if they have the Certificate they are able to undertake any role and are fully qualified H&S advisers. Many of the threads have said, it is not just qualifications but also experience that counts and most importantly, knowing your own level of competency! Trudy
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