Posted By Ian Blenkharn
If you let individuals into an industrial environment and they break the rules of safety, there are several issues - their own responsibility of course, and those who are suppose to manage, instruct and supervise them. Let them use a power press (or whatever) and there is a risk. That is managed with training and supervision, and a set of defined rules. Would you let them operate it while using a mobile? If not, why is a 40 tonne HGV different?
And as for taking responsibility? There must be the same responsibility as for the bench press worker. If staff fail to act in accordance with safety rules in the work environment is that 'their' problem? After all, you can't 'make' them wear PPE, you cant 'make' them use the safety guards and other devices, or check their work, or maintain, operate and store equipment properly and in acordance with 'your' rules.
If you think that, the assumption is that everything is 'their fault'. So just what are we here for?
As for professional responsibility, one vital point has not yet been picked up, but maybe nobody wants to grasp the nettle. If we fail to control matters of safety, and fail badly, should there be a professional sanction? Where staff fail to act safely, and the underlying reasons are bad advice or ineffective safety management, bad training or ineffective safety planning and supervision, as opposed to some obvious and deliberate or malicious failure by the worker, who takes responsibility?
Some respondents obviously feel that it could never be their problem. I disagree, and where that situation is proven, fairly and properly, then the relevent professional body must stand up to the mark, investigate, and where appropriate, must act decisively. Many professional bodies take a tough line on professional standards, and for some that is a statutory duty. A tough stance, but it serves to provide an additional and sometimes essential level of protection to employers, employees, and to the public.