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‘Director Action on Safety and Health’ Exercising leadership to save lives and reduce injuries

Presented by:. Roger Bibbings MBE, BA, CFIOSH, Occupational Safety Adviser THE ROYAL SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF ACCIDENTS. ‘Director Action on Safety and Health’ Exercising leadership to save lives and reduce injuries. About RoSPA. Charity, founded 1917

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‘Director Action on Safety and Health’ Exercising leadership to save lives and reduce injuries

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  1. Presented by: Roger Bibbings MBE, BA, CFIOSH, Occupational Safety Adviser THE ROYAL SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF ACCIDENTS ‘Director Action on Safety and Health’ Exercising leadership to save lives and reduce injuries

  2. About RoSPA Charity, founded 1917 • Work, Road, Home. Water and Leisure, Safety Education • Mission ‘To save lives and reduce injuries.’ • Vision ‘To lead the way in safety’ Key activities • Member services, outreach • Information, guidance, events, awareness raising • Training, auditing, awards • Campaigning (MORR, Directors, Small Firms, Ac Inv) Saving lives, reducing injuries

  3. Work related tragedy and waste • 241 notified fatal injuries to workers (06/07) • 100 + members of the public • 1,000 fatal WoRRIs? • 328,000 reportable injuries (LFS 06/07) • 24,000 deaths (?) due to work related health damage • 1 million injuries (all severities) • 2 million cases of work related ill health • 26 million working days lost • 2 –3 % of GDP! Saving lives, reducing injuries

  4. Where to focus effort? • Targets • HSE’s ‘high five’ (falls, STF, transport, stress, MSDs) • SMEs • Supply chain • Attendance, rehab and well-being • Occupational road safety? • Behavioural safety? • Workforce involvement • Advice and services • Directors and senior managers? Saving lives, reducing injuries

  5. Why focus on directors? • Growing understanding of accidents as organisational safety failures • Limited prosecution of directors for H&S offences, • Failure of high profile prosecutions, • Calls for greater accountability and CM • Justice gap? • Business education H&S deficit? • Leadership gap? Saving lives, reducing injuries

  6. Negative perceptions of H&S • Poor attitudes (‘don’t know, don’t care!’) • Seen as negative/not positive, burden not benefit • Poor grasp of hazard/risk/harm/loss profile • Pre Factories Act perceptions of H&S • Seen as technical/legal compliance not strategic • Weak understanding of moral/regulatory/enforcement context • Accidents due mainly to unsafe workers • Weak understanding of HSG65 approach • Nominal leadership/delegation to ‘experts’ Saving lives, reducing injuries

  7. As opposed to • Board level issue • Performance focussed • About operational integrity/reliability • About people not just technicalities • About health and well being not just safety/accidents • About unsafe systems not just individual error • About managing risks not just liability • Linked to Quality, HR, Environment, Productivity • Part of the leadership challenge at all levels.. Saving lives, reducing injuries

  8. Windscale (Sellafield) – RadiationBritish Nuclear Fuels30 estimated fatalities Abervan, – Coal Tip National Coal Board144 fatalities Kings Cross Station - FireLondon Underground31 fatalities Flixborough, Lincolnshire - ExplosionConoco Phillips18 fatalities Piper Alpha - Fire/ExplosionOccidental Phillips167 fatalities Herald of Free Enterprise - Townsend Thoresen193 fatalities 1966 1987 1987 1957 1974 1988 Leadership failures? Saving lives, reducing injuries

  9. 2000 Kegworth, UK – Plane CrashBritish Midland47 fatalities Lyme Bay - Canoeing AccidentOLL Ltd4 fatalities Southall Train Crash – Fire/ExplosionRailway Operator7 fatalities Paddington Rail CrashRailway Operator28 fatalities Glasgow, Scotland – Fire/ExplosionICL Plastics9 fatalities Grangemouth, Scotland – ExplosionBritish Petroleum2 fatalities 1988 1993 1997 2004 2004 Two decades of disasters? Saving lives, reducing injuries

  10. BP Texas City Refinery Accident, 2005: 15 dead, 170 injured $21 million fine destroyed shareholder value CEO + senior managers left high regulatory scrutiny Board did not validate effective health and safety management or strive for excellence lack of a common unifying health and safety culture over-reliance on measures of personal v process safety failure to analyse lead/lag indices of process safety James Baker Baker report Saving lives, reducing injuries

  11. Why directors should focus.. (negative drivers) • Corporate manslaughter • Manslaughter • Section 37 • Higher fines • Higher insurance premia • Threats to corporate (and personal) reputation • Low workforce morale • Loss of business continuity/opportunity Saving lives, reducing injuries

  12. Why directors should focus(positive reasons) • Turnbull etc, corporate governance, HSG65 • Top level commitment determines authority to act and performance • Confirmed by HSE, awards, audits • Responding to contracting/supply chain /stakeholder expectations • HSE performance reporting challenge • ‘H&S’ speaks volumes about an organisation’s values and professionalism • New HSE/IoD guidance Saving lives, reducing injuries

  13. INDG 417 Corporate manslaughter Section 37 Revisions to the EPS New developments Saving lives, reducing injuries

  14. New HSE/IoD guidance • Needed to set benchmarks • Joint HSE/IoD but not statutory • Sets out social, legal and business case for H&S • Describes leadership actions for directors and board members • Planning • Delivery • Monitoring • Reviewing • ‘Walking the walk’, ‘talking the talk’ • Launched 29th October at IoD Saving lives, reducing injuries

  15. Corporate manslaughter • Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Bill • Ten year campaign • Comes into force April 2008 • Overcomes problem of ‘Directing Mind’ • Unlimited fine if death due to gross corporate H&S failures • Not aimed at directors • Directors behaviour a key part of the evidence • Reserved for cases where behaviour has fallen ‘..far below what might be reasonably expected..’ Saving lives, reducing injuries

  16. Section 37 • Directors and senior managers can be prosecuted with the company if an accident was due to their consent, connivance or neglect • Para 41 EPS “enforcing authorities should identify and prosecute or recommend prosecution of individuals if they consider that a prosecution is warranted. In particular, they should consider the management chain and the role played by individual directors and managers, and should take action against them where the inspection or investigation reveals that the offence was committed with their consent or connivance or to have been attributable to neglect on their part and where it would be appropriate to do so in accordance with this policy. Where appropriate, enforcing authorities should seek disqualification of directors under the Company Directors Disqualification Act 1986.” Saving lives, reducing injuries

  17. Some RoSPA contributions to date • Awards • QSA • DASH (1998 - ) • Guidance on targets/reporting etc • GoPOP (www.gopop.org.uk) • Business schools • Back to the Floor! (www.rospa.com/occupationalsafety/bttf/) • Events Saving lives, reducing injuries

  18. So what do directors need to: feel; think; understand; know; say; and do tolead better health and safety management? Basic requirements Saving lives, reducing injuries

  19. In other words Directors need to review their: • emotional engagement with H&S issues (FEELINGS), • general thinking about the subject (ATTITUDES), • understanding of H&S (INSIGHTS), • the extent of their underpinning knowledge (AWARENESS), • what they say (ADVOCACY) and • what they do to lead effective H&S management (ACTION). Saving lives, reducing injuries

  20. Feel what? • People matter and life is to be cherished • Anguish and anger about accidents • Sympathy with victims and their families • Anxiety about the possibility of harms occurring • A sense of personal responsibility for ensuring that harms are prevented Saving lives, reducing injuries

  21. Think what? that: • People have a right to be properly protected • H&S is the cornerstone of a civilised society • Safety should be the number one corporate value • The safe way is the right way • Everyone has H&S responsibilities but • responsibility is proportional to position power • Nothing the organisation does is worth killing or injuring people for Saving lives, reducing injuries

  22. Understand that.. • Accidents and ill health are not inevitable • H&S failures have immediate and underlying causes • ‘Safety is no accident!’ ‘Fail to plan and you plan to fail!’ • The board must set the overall tone and direction • Accountability for H&S assurance rests with the board • Unsafe organisations and unsafe people spell disaster • H&S performance about ‘inputs’ and ‘outputs’ not just ‘outcomes’ • There is a massive business case for good H&S management • You can only ‘do H&S’ with people not to them • You need competent advice Saving lives, reducing injuries

  23. Know about.. • Hazards, risks, risk assessment and the hierarchy of controls • The key elements of an H&S management system • The architecture (not the detail) of H&S law • Enforcement possibilities • The organisation’s priority risks • Its H&S management strengths and weaknesses • How the organisation is progressing against targets • What ‘good’ H&S looks like at all levels • How sector peers are performing • How to lead H&S leaders • What you don’t know Saving lives, reducing injuries

  24. while focussing on the key ‘Cs’ • Competence • Control • Communications • Co-ordination • Consultation • Culture • Corporate capability Saving lives, reducing injuries

  25. Saying.. that: • H&S will come first on the balanced score card • Managers and staff will be judged on health and safety • Unsafe operations/behaviours will not be tolerated • But individuals will not be blamed for organisational failures • Clients and contractors must buy into an H&S ethos • The organisation will listen and learn • Legal requirements are a minimum • Anyone who is unsure has a right to ask • ‘Thank you’ to those who go the extra mile Saving lives, reducing injuries

  26. Doing.. • Planning • Delivering • Monitoring • Reviewing Saving lives, reducing injuries

  27. DOING: Planning… • Overall policy • Ownership • H&S Director? • Key risks • Targets • Communication • Updating and review Saving lives, reducing injuries

  28. DOING: Delivering… • Management systems • Responsibilities • Advice • Competencies • Resourcing • New processes • Procurement, supply chain • Corporate committee • Securing worker involvement Saving lives, reducing injuries

  29. DOING: Monitoring…. • Performance (inputs, outputs, outcomes) • Monitoring v audit • Active and reactive • Tracking H&S implications of change • Accident and incident investigations • Sickness absence data • Benchmarking with others • Contractor performance information Saving lives, reducing injuries

  30. DOING: Reviewing…. • Periodic review of systems capability and performance • At least annually • Does practice reflect current priorities, plans, targets? • Is performance reporting working? • Identify shortcomings • Decide actions to address shortcomings • Report performance to stakeholders • Celebration at national/ local levels Saving lives, reducing injuries

  31. ‘Walking the walk’ • Undergo training in health and safety management • Participate in H&S tours, PGIs and BS observations • Take direct responsibility for tough H&S decisions • Undertake unannounced visits and ‘challenge audits’ • Lead investigation teams • Review serious accidents/incidents • Take part in H&S management systems auditing • Challenge unsafe acts and conditions • Never cancel scheduled H&S meetings • Set a good personal example Saving lives, reducing injuries

  32. ‘Talking the talk’ • Personally email employees to disseminate safety lessons and praise initiatives • Chair health and safety committee meetings • Act as board ‘champion’ on specific safety issues • Meet regularly with safety representatives • Talk directly to employees,/contractors/clients about H&S concerns • Nominate for safety awards • Deliver health and safety training • Take part in industry/sector initiatives Saving lives, reducing injuries

  33. In summary.. • Better health and safety performance - better leadership - strategic vision – and involvement at the sharp end too.. • So how do you measure up? Saving lives, reducing injuries

  34. Some sources… • HSE/IoD guidance (http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg417.pdf ) • HSE: Managing H&S: Five steps to success (http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg275.pdf) • RoSPA: BTTF (http://www.rospa.com/occupationalsafety/bttf/index.htm) • HSE: Business benefit case studies (http://www.hse.gov.uk/businessbenefits/casestudy.htm) • HSE: Leadership case studies (http://www.hse.gov.uk/corporateresponsibility/casestudies/) • HSE: Reporting guidance (http://www.hse.gov.uk/revitalising/annual.htm) • RoSPA: GoPOP (www.gopop.org.uk) Saving lives, reducing injuries

  35. Thank you

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