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Posted By Andy Petrie
As if the conker story the other week wasn't bad enough there are three more stories in the press this week that make me cringe:
1, An insurance company is making tennants in a block of flats as they represent and 'avoidable event' in terms of a potential health risk.
2, A fire station has been banned from staging a bonfire on H&S grounds. Apparently it would need 24 hour security and it was not a 24hr fire station.
3, A council has been banned from throwing poppies of their roof on rememberance day as the paper poppies could present a fire hazard and there is no suitable fire escape from the roof.
How many more British tradditions are going to fall foul of the 'Elfs (that's Elf & Safety to the uninitiated).
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Posted By Lee Murray
Andy - how on earth are the insurance company making council tennants, aren't there laws about cloning and the like? Or is this, as I suspect, reference to the removal of window boxes etc. from balconies?
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Posted By Katie Hoyland
The lack of common sense applied to some of these decisions gives the whole H&S industry an awful name.Do you feel that every time you hear that a tradition or activity such as one of these has been halted on health and safety grounds it becomes a fraction more embarrassing to admit at a banquet or social event that you work in the H& S industry?
On the flip side, if it was not for the 'blooming' compensation culture how many of us would have jobs????
You can not have cake and eat it ( providing that COSHH Ass's are completed first obviously) is sometime how one feels.
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Posted By Sean Fraser
And don't forget - some of these stories are either gross misrepresentations or entirely fictitious!
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Posted By Andy Petrie
Sean,
they're all off the BBC website, so I imagine there is an element of truth in them. (Unless Alistair Cambell has been spinning again)
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Posted By Alex Ryding
Well there are some traditions surviving; I have no idea how this one does!
http://www.tarbarrels.co.uk
So while you local council bans conkers...Come barrel burning instead!
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Posted By Jim Walker
Andy,
It was always thus - just that H&S is the current target.
Deciding that the world is going mad is just part of growing (cynical) up.
Soon, you will be a grumpy old man - welcome!
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Posted By Keith Whittle
Alex - the barrels are awsome! Risk assessement? hahahaha
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Posted By Katie Hoyland
I heard via a friend of mine the other day that her local health club had removed the snack vending machines from their foyer for fear of hand entrapment in the dispensing tray area. Surely overkill?
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Posted By fats van den raad
Overkill!!!!... I think not!! Have you ever had your hand trapped in one of those infernal contraptions??? If you have you wouldn't take such a light hearted approach to it. It was a packet of Maltesers that proved my downfall and my entrapment. Once that lid on the tray where you get your stuff out closes behind your hand, you've had it. When you find yourself in a situation like this people come up with the strangest ideas. One guy even suggested that I would be freed if I let go of the Maltesers!!! Yeah right... that's gonaa help. I'll still be trapped AND without my Maltesers. Not bloody likely!!!!!
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Posted By Jonathan Breeze
Fats,
Perhaps some sort of machinery guarding would be in order...
...There's a European Standard don't you know!
;-)
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Posted By Tamara Stuart
I like Maltesers too.
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Posted By John Webster
Here's a link to the windowboxes story, and a lot of other curious info (who collects these data anyway?)
It looks as if we are doing ourselves out of a job. Being at work is far safer than staying at home. Even the cuddly teddy bear is responsible for more deaths & injuries than the real thing!!
http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1242432004
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Posted By Sean Fraser
Don't know about the rest of you but I found the Scotsman article to be reasonably balanced and quite informative. And I hadn't known about the bra - breast cancer link before so I'll be looking into that further (if you pardon the expression).
Mind you, the issue comes back to denying people opportunities to improve their living environments by blanket banning the use of the window-boxes when a more sensible approach would be to find a way of ensuring they are propoerly secured and enforcing that instead.
This sort of thing treats people as children or sheep, tacitly stating that they are incapable of identifying these hazards for themselves and taking appropriate action to reduce risks. Bans should only be a very last resort (just like PPE) and only when all other possibilities are exhausted, like smoking (no pun intended).
Perhaps if children received better education at a young age about hazard awareness and risk perception, we wouldn't have quite as many of the kinds of injuries reported in the article and we wouldn't need to be having this conversation. I think that as a profession, we should be assisting in achieving the goal of mainstreaming occupational safety and health into education, 1] for the education sector itself but more importantly 2] in order to get children participating in safety and health at the youngest age possible so they carry these important principles with them not only into the workplace but for whole of life.
I can already hear the cries of "for goodness sake let children be children" but I would ask you - if we do not make the effort to encourage people to be more responsible for themselves at the earliest age, are we honestly prepared to continue with the pain, suffering and loss that injury and ill-health causes year on year? I agree that often experience is a good way to learn, but if we follow that concept to a logical conclusion then what we should be doing is injuring people at work in a controlled manner and then saying "imagine how much more it would hurt if it ripped off the finger rather than just trapped it". Is it not possible to say up front that falling out of a tree will hurt, instead of waiting until they do and saying "well you won't be doing that again, will you?". Of course it is. Won't stop children climbing trees, but they might be a bit more aware of the dangers and mitigate the risk of falling (or the consequences should they do so).
For more information on the mainstreamining of OSH in education, go to the European Agency for Safety and Health website:
http://europe.osha.eu.in...sheducation/index_en.stm
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Posted By Merv Newman
Odd, but I fell out of a conker tree when I was about 11. For many years my right arm did not swing in time with my left leg. (you try walking any other way) However from about 13 to 16 I went for the highest and hardest (most dangerous) tree climbs I could find. Even did Veno's crossing ! (if anyone on this chat show knows that one then you too must have miss spent your youth)
There is no way that I am going to recommend that we cut down all the trees, fit children with fall arresters, give them hard hats in the play ground ...
Sensible, professional, defendable risk assessments first. And then the sensible, professional, defendable action plans.
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Posted By Sean Fraser
Merv,
Not quite sure if you are responding to my last post and if so, what point are you making? I certainly do not advocate blanket banning or changing the environment so much that it is the equivalent of wrapping people in cotton wool.
I agree that risk assessment is a must - but what I advocate is teaching such assessment to young children so they grow up capable of doing it for themselves automatically, not having others do it for them. And I say again - why are we trying to change the ingrained attitudes of adults when we would be reaping much greater rewards in teaching children when their brains are still developing? So much additional wasted effort with inconsistent results and a gradual change in behaviours. Start as you mean to go on - don't keeping on at the adults waiting for their Damascus moment to strike, assuming that it ever does.
The Church of Safety has to be careful that it doesn't become exlusionist or it will be preaching one aim while actively working against it. The term risk assessment often provokes a groan and many consider it an impediment to getting the job done - but if this had been taught at a young age then it would simply be an accepted part of living (note - NOT just working!). It would also be done so habitually that it wouldn't even need much in the way of records, one of the barriers to getting the assessments done. We could then move away from a record based bureucracy and towards habitual behaviours that are prevention oriented.
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Posted By Adam Jackson
Every time I see something in the media as coming from RoSPA I shudder. I'm sure they do a lot of good work but on many occasion they have been responsible for my cringing at the impression they give of my career and those in it.
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Posted By Jim Walker
Am I the only one who notices a common thread in all these daft pronouncements: i.e. it is usually from local authorities. And whilst it is blamed on "elf n safety" my guess is it is really down to mediocre legal departments who have little concept of risk assessment and slap on blanket bans rather than sensible risk controls. LA colleagues please comment.
Having said that, my missus used to work in A&E and the injuries caused by mind boggling stupidity makes you wonder where some people have left their brains.
Adam, ref: ROSPA, thanks goodness IOSH shows restraint, long may it last.
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Posted By Jonathan Breeze
Jim,
I would respond to that, but our legal department are concerned about subsequent litigation from any lawyer I might offend.
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Posted By Zoe Barnett
I have just fallen over trying to walk without swinging my arms properly.
Merve, I'm afraid I'm going to have to sue.
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Posted By Adam Jackson
There's probably a RoSPA press release somewhere on the dangers of walking urging the banning of all walking "off road" and the mandatory wearing of flat-soled shoes at all times.
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Posted By Robert Bradford
Jim, I read somewhere that the two most plentiful elements in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity
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