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The car park thread has been diverted on to a topic that may be worth discussing in its own right.
Just because an HSE or local authority Inspector serves a Prohibition or Improvement Notice, or more recently one of those Fee For Intervention Notices of Contravention doesn't mean that the recipient has to take it on the chin.
May be perfectly good reasons for doing so, including that the recipient is non-compliant but also for strategic reasons such as avoiding hassle.
But it is ALWAYS worth looking hard at the Notice and considering its merits and whether to challenge either Notice or the FFI price tag attached to it (priced at a very high hourly rate, whatever the rank of the person serving it).
This is particularly so when there is no clear benchmark as to what the law requires in practice, eg. an industry standard.
Before serving any Notice, an Inspector has to be of the "opinion" that there is a breach of legislation or in the case of a Prohibition Notice that there is imminent risk of serious personal injury.
Like anyone their opinion may not be valid, and particularly so when it comes to any legislative requirement that is qualified e.g. to do what is "reasonably practicable".
In the car park thread, Chris' MD made a decision to take the hit and do what the Inspector wanted, apparently with little, if any, guidance from the Inspector as to what might constitute sufficient separation between vehicles and pedestrians, with costs in terms of both £££ of capital to make changes and resultant reduced car parking capacity, resulting in people parking on the public highway leading in Chris' opinion (which might be just as valid as that of the Inspector, or MORE valid) in an increase in overall risk.
I have the perception that the overall quality of HSE Inspectors has deteriorated as deep cuts to HSE's budget have continued year on year, particularly since 2010, which means that the "opinion" of a current Inspector may be less likely to be valid than in days past.
There will always be scales of levels of competence of Inspectors both overall and in relation to specific sectors or topics, but perhaps those scales are at a level lower than they used to be.
When I did 4 years inspecting Construction and Fairgrounds my Principal Inspector gave me some sound advice that remains relevant. His advice was that if I had any doubts about serving a Notice, particularly one that would immediately stop a job, I should opt for prosecution instead. That way if my opinion was wrong, there was no risk that HSE could be hit by Judicial Review with a claim for all the costs of my decision to instruct the recipient of a Notice to stop work.
It's somewhat different with most Notices served by HSE and local authority Inspectors as there is 21 days to appeal and the Notice is suspended until a tribunal has made a decision as to whether to confirm it, amend it, or, of course find in favour of the Appellant. This suspension does NOT apply to an Immediate Prohibition Notices, so that the costs sustained by a successful Appllant could escalate significantly whilst they await the outcome of their Appeal.
Inspectors are not used to having their Notices challenged - it happens SO rarely. This is likely to produce a climate in which some get rather complacent!