Posted By BB
A sorry tale of woe. Comments and advice welcomed. This is of course a hypothetical case...........of course.
CMIOSH working in (multi-national) company has full time operational job, is (like everyone) at full stretch, unloved, underpaid and under-resourced, but still smiling. Very versatile but has very limited construction experience.
- So far this sounds pretty familiar eh?
Company decides on ambitious expansion plans which include extensive construction and refit in existing facilities, but normal business needs to continue with minimum disruption.
- Exciting and challenging stuff eh?
Company decides to 'save' wads of cash and project manage the job itself, thereby becoming Client and Principal Contractor.
- Now getting scary but still challenging?
Eventually, existing operational CMIOSH is included in discussions and asked for opinion and advice. CMIOSH strongly urges a rethink, especially in light of new CDM, conflict of interest and risk to the business.
It is agreed that extensive construction H&S support is required and in an effort to remain flexible, CMIOSH recommends 3 options for additional resources to ensure the H&S Plan is implemented and work is managed as appropriately as possible, given the non-ideal project structure. Options welcomed and broadly agreed as being the way forward by senior managers. CMIOSH beginning to relish a new challenge!
- Sensible, still scary and challenging?
2 weeks on, CMIOSH told that no extra resource will be forthcoming and he will have to cope on her/his own. Decision made by director with little experience, training or knowledge of construction.
- Just scary now.
CMIOSH responds with obvious concerns that she/he is happy to support with regard Client duties but is not competent to fully advise on construction H&S issues as part of the PC, and in any event, already has a job! (Besides which, CMIOSH points out that if he/she was competent to take up such a role, they would've been working on T5, London 2012 or one of the massive housing developments in the area by now, on wads of dosh!).
Senior managers who have all had IOSH MS training, and in two cases, a CDM update course, all pretend to understand concerns, but none have the spine to confront the issue/director head-on.
CMIOSH has documented all recommendations, rationale for arguments and threats to business if the status quo is allowed to continue. If all goes on incident-free everyone will get pat on the back, but in all likelihood, it'll go belly-up and this will uncover a collection of poor decisions.
CMIOSH now wrestling with conscience, struggling to work out how to remain effective whilst trying to wear armour plating.
CONUNDRUM:
CMIOSH feels up the creek with no paddle, can only see a future grim reality should he/she:
a) Go with the flow, and then take cover when it all goes pear-shaped?
b) Run in the opposite direction, lick wounds and get another job and move on?
c) Confront director, give piece of mind, then follow option b)