Posted By MP Grayson
Difficult one this and no doubt what I am going to write now will get some peoples backs up. Each and every one of us as a H/S professional has to say “SACK EM”. And that includes those that had a quick and crafty smile at the young lad being “cling filmed”.
What I see here is a group of young men acting like kids. Which is exactly how young men do behave. And we as professionals need to remember that. YES I think that what was needed was to make a stand and show that this behaviour is intolerable. The company has clearly done that as they have sacked 8 of them for breaches of Health and Safety. Was that the right thing to do? (answers on the back of a £20 note please). I cannot say yes or no as I wasn’t there. I don’t know how often it happened, was it a one off, was there a ring leader and I don’t know what their attitude was. If they were sorry and remorseful, with a good chance that it would never happen again. Would demotion or removal of their FLT licence (which often results in a pay cut) be a more measured approach. Of course if their attitude is TWO FINGERS TO YOU, then the Management attitude should be “see yer latter looser”, I would show them the door myself. The answer is of course that I don’t know and before I get slated, I DO NOT approve of this behaviour. But it worries me that we seem to live in this all or nothing world and I can actually remember being 19 (just, with the help of some photos of course), so I can remember being young and stupid. Now, let me give you two different scenarios.
1. I had a job where I worked with a person that was responsible for maintenance. His attitude was negative to say the least. On one occasion when we stood toe to toe and I gave him a bit of man on man, one on one positive counselling, he responded by saying “Mark, I don’t care what health, safety or environmental legislation I break”. Unfortunately the fact was that; as the H/S bod I was the necessary evil. As the Maintenance Manager; he was critical to the efficient running of the business. And that is just how the senior management team saw it, so the end result is a guy who is untouchable. He would instruct his staff to use a FLT as a lifting platform with a pallet used as a seat, refuel a tractor next to a surface water drain. And he was once heard bragging that whilst I was teaching new staff H/S, he was working in the same room, on a defective step ladder, investigating a leaking roof, with no risk assessment or method statements. NOW there’s a man who needed his P45 and I was a man in need of serious Management support. So I read that report and think, why couldn't I just have had half of that support.
2. I did some years as an aircraft fitter in the RAF. At one time we had a permanent detachment to an American Airbase in a sunny part of Italy. In fact, it was a really nice, sunny part of Italy. The base had no aircraft at the time as it was on war reserve. It was however fully equip to take USAF reserve forces in the event of the “big bad commie army” pouring over the German border. Everything was there ready; all it needed was planes and people. Then we moved in.
We were based in a really big hangar with several dozen Wendy’s in the corner. The Wendy looks like a go-cart with forks on the front. It is specially designed for loading bombs or fuel tanks onto aircraft.
A few months after I arrived I was talking to one of the few American staff at the base. He commented on how much luck we had brought to him. Part of his job was Wendy maintenance (there could be a joke there, move on, quick). Before we arrived the Wendy’s were hard to start as each one was only fired up every other month. Now they all started first time, every time. He didn’t see the obvious, but I did. The little tinkers on my shift were waiting until night shift, fixing the Wendy’s and then having races around the Hangar. Needless to say it stopped and words were said. Yes OK I couldn’t fire them, but they could have been sent home complete with tails between their legs. It was dealt with there and then, no one died, no one got hurt and it never got repeated. Thankfully it was before the time of mobile phones with cameras and at a time when old farts like me had never heard of the Tinternet. So I watch programs like that on U-tube and think. That could have been my shift.
Sometimes I think that we get it all wrong, (in fact, I know we get it wrong) as do the Management team and the other staff members. Clearly we can all see here a situation where Health and Safety has received the full backing and support from the Management (top banana). Many of us will look on in envy at that and think, oh please just once, back me up, just this once, please. Unfortunately it seems that often we can be partially guilty when we take our eye off the ball, we forget about how daft young people are or how arrogant crusty old giffers who have always done it that way are. We seem to always be thinking reactive and not pro-active. True we cannot be every where at once……….
Drat, dinner break over, gotta go back to work.
Cut a long story short. Don’t know the answer.
Crack on…