Hi Lynn
A PS.
I am always in favour of finding reasons to let people do things rather than excuses to stop things - often giving the media the chance to have yet another headline about 'elf and safety bonkers
So, some more thoughts.
For several years, RoSPA had a contract to collate stats for accidents at home and in leisure activities in what are the HASS and LASS databases.
Those came to an end in the age of austerity but RoSPA still have the data for a period up to about 2010 and I doubt that you will find much about garden benches that kill or harm.
Then if you google for accidents involving garden benches (something that few would do without good reason, such as a near miss at a hospice) not much comes up.
Whereas googling the words "accident", "garden bench" and "hotel" all at the same time gets multiple hits, but all about ONE single incident which was considered to be newsworthy by editors who rarely publish anything about similar incidents but might have thought that this one merited attention (a) because the victim was American and (b) because it resulted in a prosecution.
But the prosecution was not defended and so doesn't set any legal precedent as to what would or would NOT be reasonably practicable in any specific set of circumstances.
Now, the HSE who ended up advising the Procurator Fiscal in relation to the hotel fatality sets out what it thinks might be considerations in decision making on the issue of "reasonable practicability" in a document routinely referred to as R2P2 as that's much quicker to say than the full title and is all that you need to find the document via Google.
So, R2P2 suggests that for most scenarios any risk where the Individual Risk of Death per year is less than 1 in a million (1 x 10-6), then it is probably "broadly acceptable" but that for those who are particularly vulnerable (such as residents in a hospice) you should reduce this threshold to 3 chances per 10 million - 3 x 10-7.
Suppose you might count 10 @ broken legs or injuries of similar severity as being equivalent to one fatality AND 200 minor injuries as being equivalent to one fatality (applying similar principles in those in the Rail Safety and Safety Standards Safety Risk Model) you could......
.....collect all published data on garden bench accidents (considering how many garden benches there are in the UK!!!! - for starters we have three in our garden) and calculate what the total risk from garden benches is.
.... and perhaps multiple that by 10 to allow for most such accidents never reaching the public domain, I very much doubt that the risk is going to get anywhere near an INDIVIDUAL risk of 3 x 10-7.
In contrast, I imagine that it is not uncommon for vulnerable residents of hospices, care homes and hospitals to be fatally or severely injured by simply slipping and tripping, such that their heads or other parts of the body impact with hard surfaces, whether that be the ground, worktops, walls, trees or whatever.
[I don't have the figures but they are almost certainly recorded, albeit with much underrecording]
So, unless as a society we choose to put all such vulnerable people into padded cells so that they get "soft landings" - and thence remove their dignity and amenity - then it seems to me that intervening so as to prevent people moving garden furniture to enrich the resident/visitor experience is likely to be an inappropriate response to a near miss in ONE residential setting for such people.
P