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Health and Safety at Work Institute of Employment Rights Conference London, 12 th June David Whyte, University of Liverpool WORKPLACE SAFETY WITHOUT LAW.

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Presentation on theme: "Health and Safety at Work Institute of Employment Rights Conference London, 12 th June David Whyte, University of Liverpool WORKPLACE SAFETY WITHOUT LAW."— Presentation transcript:

1 Health and Safety at Work Institute of Employment Rights Conference London, 12 th June David Whyte, University of Liverpool WORKPLACE SAFETY WITHOUT LAW ENFORCEMENT?

2 (Tombs and Whyte, 2010) since 1999:  All types of enforcement notice fallen by a third  48% fall in prosecutions  Driven by declining ‘pro-active’ regulation? (UNITE/CCA 2008) 2001/02 – 2006/07  Investigation of major injuries halved  Number of investigations into three-day injuries cut by 2/3rds  Number of major injuries to members of the public cut by three quarters  The end of credible threat of enforcement? THE EMASCULATION OF ENFORCEMENT

3  Removal of credible threat of legal sanction?  Sends message to both employers and employees.  Anecdotal evidence that message is being heard…  Political/policy silence ‘A large number of responses and comments I received related to the issue of enforcement of the regulations. A wide-ranging consideration of the extent and nature of enforcement activity is largely beyond the scope of this review….’ (Löfstedt Report) ENFORCEMENT IN CRISIS

4 FOD INSPECTION RECORDS

5 (Tombs and Whyte, 2010) HSE inspection activity since 1999: Two thirds fall in FOD inspections Between 2006/07 and 2012/13: Investigations stablised at low level (below 30,000) Hazardous installations division inspections fallen by 48% ……withdrawal of inspection has direct impact on enforcement (typically 5%-7% of enforcement notices result from RIDDOR reports; and typically between a quarter and a third of prosecutions) WITHDRAWAL OF INSPECTION….

6  2005: Hampton report based on: 1.Gordon Brown’s sustained ‘risk-based’ attack on socially protective regulation 2.a concept of targeted intervention against ‘bad’ corporate citizens  Published in the midst of the most significant shift in enforcement/pro-active regulation in 3 decades  2010: Coalition quickly exploited weakness of regulators to shift  Key government ‘inquiries’ (Young, Löfstedt etc.) validate ‘low risk’ concept  Government sources/HSE fail to respond to universal criticism FROM TARGETED INTERVENTION TO ‘LOW RISK’

7  Ending of proactive inspections in low risk workplaces done by subversive policy not legislation or parliamentary process  DWP list of ‘low risk’ workplaces’ quickly extended (includes most manufacturing, docks, quarries, as well as all of the workplaces outside the HID responsibilities; see Hazards, January 2013)  None of this is justified by HSE using a health and safety rationale (O’Neill, 2013)  Shift away from so-called low risk workplaces partly predicated on a shift in pro-active focus to hazardous work.  BUT this is also part of the big lie…. THE BIG ‘LOW RISK’ LIE

8 HID INSPECTION RECORDS

9 SPECIALISED INDUSTRIES

10  Biological agents inspections have fallen by 73% reason not related to industry/decline in hazards….  Explosives inspections at same level  Gas and Pipelines inspections have risen by 45% - culture of awareness of criminal negligence in industry - indicated by recent open letter to HSE by Plumbing and Heating Contractors Association - is this impacting upon inspection? SPECIALISED INDUSTRIES

11 CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES DIVISION

12 between 2006/07 and 2012/13 Chemicals Industry Division inspections have fallen 40%  Industry relatively buoyant  Consistent growth in productivity for early half of this period  Post-crash some loss of jobs (CIA estimate 10% loss) projected to be regained CHEMICALS INDUSTRY INSPECTIONS

13 MINES INSPECTIONS

14 between 2006/07 and 2012/13 Mines inspections have fallen by 94%  reflects the decline of the industry?  BUT workers have paid a heavy price..an industry out of control?  Hazards Magazine (116, Oct/Dec 2011): showed between 2005/06 and 2010/11, UK coal mining fatality rate over 60 times the all-industries rate for same period and documented “HSE’s deadly optimism”  Daw Mill – massive fire in April 2013 (previously 3 workers killed at Daw Mill 2006-2007) MINES INSPECTIONS

15 OFFSHORE SAFETY DIVISION

16 between 2006/07 and 2012/13 Offshore Safety Division inspections have fallen by three quarters  2007 - two major platform fires and condemnation by MPs of industry ‘on a knife-edge’  Industry relatively buoyant – employment rates rising slightly OFFSHORE INSPECTIONS


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