Thanks to all of you who have taken the trouble to respond here. I will endeavor to deal with each in turn.
Peter – You have succinctly hit the nail on the head as regards your comments concerning the HSE guidance and reference to the actual regulations. ESI1 is guidance only. HSE guidance cannot change the law. I also accept your comments regarding HSE’s potential reasons for influencing the underreporting of accidents. Unfortunately, we continue to disagree over whether supervising children is a work-related activity.
School premises are used for education. The playground is a part of the school premises rather than being ancillary to the school building in which the teaching is undertaken. It is a place of work in its own right not only for teachers and teaching assistants but also for ‘dinner ladies’ etc. The supervision of children in a playground is a work activity, regardless of which member of school staff undertakes it, because it is a part of their duties to do so, within school hours and they are presumably being paid to undertake that work. I cannot see how supervising children could not be classed as a work activity. It therefore follows that an accident arising out of its conduct (negligently or not) is for the purpose of regs. 2 and 5, “an accident arising out of or in connection with work.” ESI1 accepts that supervising children in the playground is a work activity or arises “in connection with a work activity.” Were it not, EIS1 would not require the reporting of any accidents involving the supervision of children in playgrounds.
EIS1 makes it clear that accidents involving unsupervised or poorly supervised children are to be reported. So we have a situation where an accident involving properly supervised children is not reportable but if the supervision falls below par, such as if a supervisor’s attention is diverted to playing a game on their phone, for example, and the same injury is sustained in the same circumstances, it is reportable. That premise is, frankly, perverse and there is no provision under RIDDOR for HSE to grant such a derogation from the legal duty to report.
Kate – I accept that the children are not themselves working. It is the supervisor who is at work and the supervision of them is the work activity. The children are only playing at the school at that particular break time because it is ancillary to, and as I have stated above, potentially a part of their education.
Stevedm – The Court of Appeal’s decision in Richards v London Borough of Bromley [2012] EWCA Civ 1476 is irrelevant to the question posted by the OP. That was whether the accident under consideration was reportable under RIDDOR. The question of whether the injured child would be able to pursue a civil claim for damages is entirely another matter and if, as stated by the OP, the child simply falls over, no matter how serious the injury, no justifiable claim will arise. Indeed, I had the unenviable task of arriving at that same conclusion and passing it on to parents in a case of break-time paraplegia on a playing field. I agree entirely that not every misfortune on school premises attracts compensation nor, as a matter of public policy, should they do so.
A Kurdziel – A valid point with which I agree. But the matter, strictly speaking, so far as RIDDOR is concerned, remains reportable nonetheless.