News

Health & Safety Update (January 2010)

Directors' duties- proposals for guidance on health and safety

The Trades Union Congress (TUC) is calling on the Government to change the law placing a new general duty on directors to ensure they are legally responsible for health and safety failings.

With 35% of companies having boards that do not have health and safety on meeting agendas and only 31% setting targets for health and safety it means that those who set the strategic direction of an organisation, allocate resources or oversee operations are often unaware of the health and safety implications of their decisions.

In 2000 the Government published its strategy 'Revitalising Health and Safety' recommending that the HSE develop a code of practice on Director's responsibilities and to change the law to make these responsibilities statutory.

Since then there has been voluntary guidance only, although corporate responsibility became law in 2007. The guidance is aimed at board members of all types of organisations in both the private and public sectors. Five key action points are outlined and explained:

  1. The board needs to accept formally and publicly its collective role in providing health and safety leadership in its organisation.
  2. Each member of the board needs to accept their individual role in providing health and safety leadership for their organisation.
  3. The board needs to ensure that its decisions reflect its health and safety intentions, as articulated in the health and safety policy statement.
  4. The board needs to recognise its role in engaging the active participation of workers in improving health and safety.
  5. The board needs to ensure that it is kept informed of, and alert to, relevant health and safety risk management issues and also recommends appointing one board member to be "health and safety" director.

The voluntary approach has failed to ensure that directors in all organisations, public and private, take responsibility for the health and safety of the staff they employ.

The TUC's proposal is for a new general duty on directors, under the HSW Act backed up with an Approved Code of Practice. This could be based on the current voluntary guidance. It would mean that directors, individually and collectively, would have to take steps to assure themselves that their organisation was ensuring health and safety. Through the provisions of the Code of Practice it would be made clear to directors what this means in practice.

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