Hi Cambridge Fox
Well it seems to be a bit clearer now!
'ensure that the organisation is meeting its H&S obligations as an employer'
If the internal auditors are competent then they shouldn't need to know much about H&S to audit whether you (the organisation, NOT you the individual!) are properly implementing whatever policies and procedures are in place.
That's essentially a tick box exercise.
Procedure 2456 says that there has to be a documented risk assessment for whatever is being done.
So the auditors go out to the shop floor and look at a process and ask to see the documented risk assessment. If that is produced fine, if not there is going to be some variant of non-conformance report.
BUTTTT - just because there is a documented risk assessment shouldn't give the Risk and Audit Committee the comfort it needs that 'the organisation is meeting its H&S obligations as an employer'.
....for the simple reason that the risk assessment might be far from "suitable and sufficient" OR that it might not be adequately executed OR numerous other failings.
So, I think that the RAAC have set inappropriate terms of reference.
They could:
1. Ask YOU to do a gap analysis of the organisation's policy and procedures and implementation of same against legislation to come up with recommendations for improvements.
2. Get in auditors to do something similar, if they want an element of independence, but with a brief to audit with a focus on legislative compliance NOT compliance with the organisation's systems (though there is value in that as well).
Some considerable number of years back we infuriated one of the top bosses in a very large organisation, where part of our brief was to audit against OHSAS 18001, but we had drafted our own project brief as part of our proposal for the job and we had indicated that our primary focus would be on legislative compliance.
We looked at a postholder and their job description. The JD said that the postholder needed a minimum of 5 years working in the sector. They had been brought with a background in an entirely different sector.
This was prima facie evidence of sector-specific legislation and in terms of OHSAS 18001 required a Major Non Conformance Report.
Said top boss commented that the organisation was deliberately trying to bring in new blood.
That was fine by us, if the postholder had transferable skills and experience - so the problem was an unnecessarily prescriptive person spec - what it needed to say was NOT 5 years experience in that sector but 5 years experience in one or more sectors with comparable risks.
For exactly the same reasons as why this organisation was trying to bring in new blood, we had put together a team some of whom had little or no experience in the sector - because they would come with open eyes and be immune to the industry custom and practice.
One of our team spotted numerous examples of work at height with no fall protection and asked why. "We've always done it that way." In many other sectors very similar scenarios exist and with fall protection provided (so clearly reasonably practicable) so that was another NCR.
Whether the FAAC were to go for options 1 or 2 makes little difference on one issue. Unless they have an infinite budget they are never going to get an audit report that says (with competent honesty) 'the organisation is meeting its H&S obligations as an employer'.
...as audit is always a sampling exercise that never covers EVERYTHING in sufficient depth to provide an entirely clean bill of health!
So, perhaps what they should be asking for is an audit that seeks to identify issues where there is room for improvement with recommendations for how to do this and a proposed action plan.
If the RAAC want a puppet to give them the clean bill of health, then such a puppet is available but their report will be liable to be ripped to shreds when put to the test if it does not provide a valid assessment from an audit of sufficient depth.
So such a report at best could only provide temporary misplaced comfort to the RAAC - and they should know this!!