Hi Mudmuppet
May be we are more civilised up here in Scotland where everything is about doing what is reasonable EXCEPT when a permanent stopping up notice is being considered.
Publication 2005 - Scottish Outdoor Access Code.pdf (outdooraccess-scotland.scot)
So, the idea that a farmer might wish to temporarily divert a path to enable their cattle to graze - and thence maintain - a path is OK subject to providing a reasonable alternative.
However getting back to what happens South of the Border, it is worth remembering that there have been relatively few prosecutions on this issue and they will have been almost invariably NOT defended.
A farmer who is prosecuted (like any other defendant charged with an offence under HSWA or associated legislation) has to make a decision whether to plead guilty or to take the case to trial.
VERY few defendants choose the trial option in H&S prosecutions and there are multiple reasons why they might plead guilty which include, inter alia an automatic reduction in sentence for an early guilty plea AND that if the issue is about the test of what was or wss NOT reasonably practicable, the onus is on the defendant to prove that element of the case on the balance of probabilities - which becomes more difficult if there has been an incident and hindsight bias may come into people's thinking.
The problem is that the HSE can then publish a press release that may present a skewed narrative, and the media (including the specialist H&S media) then tend to repeat what HSE has said verbatim with little, if any, interrogation.
Then people (incuding OSH professionals, some of whom should know better) tend to think that a case sets legal precedent when it doesn't.
All the case tells you is that Defendant A pleaded guilty to a charge saying that they did X, Y and Z, often with one charge saying that their risk assessment was not "suitable and sufficient".
That usually tells the reader absolutely nothing about whether the risk assessment was ACTUALLY not suitable and sufficient as HSE rarely say how the risk assessment might have been improved.
....and if the main charge involved the test of "reasonable practicability" the case tells the reader absolutely nothing about why the defendant failed to reach the standard required NOR what would have reached that target.
Sometimes the HSE press release might say that M, N and O could have been done - and may be these were "possible" aka "practicable". That doesn't mean that M, N and/or O were "reasonably practicable" which is usually the test.
I think the wording of AIS17EW is unfortunate, perhaps even careless.
Rather than saying the farmer should CONSIDER a menu of precautionary measures it gives a list of bullets the first of which reads:
- Wherever possible keep cattle in fields that do not have public access, especially when cattle are calving or have calves at foot.
But the test is usually NOT what is "possible" but what is "reasonably practicable". HSE should read the legislation for which it is the main enforcing authority!!!
The bullets that follow that which I have quoted are similarly problematic. As example:
- Check that fences, gates, stiles etc are safe and fit for their purpose.
This strays even further from the test. It is effectively saying that there is a strict liability duty on the farmer to make sure that each and every fence is "safe" AND "fit for purpose" at all times, whatever the circumstances.
So, a storm comes along, a tree gets blown over and smashes the fence. If you take the guidance in AIS17EW at face value, the farmer is immediately in breach unless they take instantaneous action to move the tree and fix the fence! Perhaps the guidance should include a bullet to advise the farmer to pray to their deities to avoid storms.
Fortunately AIS17EW is just guidance. It is NOT an authoritative statement of what the law ACTUALLY requires.
Edited by user 17 February 2024 15:25:39(UTC)
| Reason: Additional text