Health & Safety at Work

Published by: Michael Simon on 3rd Jun 2009 | View all blogs by Michael Simon
Taken from our blog - http://www.resourcing-solutions.com/blog/?p=223#more-223

Health & Safety at work

This month we are focusing on Health and Safety roles and whether organisations can really afford to compromise on reducing their Health and Safety staff in order to cut costs.

Over the last three months around 1,250 professional health and safety experts have been made redundant and are now actively looking for work. Has the Health and Safety profession become oversubscribed in recent years, or are companies short-sightedly sacrificing the welfare of their workforce to provide a short term solution to financial woes and the credit crunch?

The latter seems to be the case, at least in the construction industry, as one in five construction sites failed health and safety checks during the latest national inspection initiative carried out by the Health & Safety Executive (HSE), figures released earlier this month reveal. Enforcement notices were served to immediately stop the work or activity on site or to require improvements to be made within a specified timescale in the majority of the cases BUT in 11 cases, inspectors believed the situation on site to be so poor that prosecution is being considered.

Another recent article informed us that around 8 per cent of UK businesses have slashed their safety budgets amid the recession, according to a new study by the Institution of Occupational Safety and Health. About 75 per cent of business leaders denied making any reductions to their health and safety budget but worryingly a further 17 per cent were unsure if any cuts had been made.

Our Health and Safety Recruitment Specialists Helen Gotts and Michael Simon would love to hear your views on this subject. Are you a Health and Safety expert looking for work or currently in employment and understand this area could be at risk?

Is reducing safety resources perceived as an effective and efficient cost saving, or is this potentially opening companies up to more serious issues in the long term?

229 workers were killed at work in 2007/08 according to the British Safety Council.

Comments

4 Comments

  • David Wilson
    by David Wilson 2 years ago
    Interesting that we can go to the IOSH site from here!!! One up to HSE people I fear
  • Glyn Atkinson
    by Glyn Atkinson 2 years ago
    It would be interesting to survey all firms that made H&S staff redundant in the last six monthsand audit their present system of retaining H&S standards.

    I know that the guy who took over my job as well as his own (I could have done the opposite double job with a £7500 salary cut !!)is struggling and he was nearly always first in and last out before he took my role on, and the admin clerk was also made redundant so he does all his own admin as well !! (Takes all his own stress tablets as well!!)
  • James Kennedy
    by James Kennedy 2 years ago
    I have heard of H&S people being laid off and the manager that they would have advised over the past while has now taken up the role of H&S advisor etc etc
    I fear H&S has taken a big step backwards.......The role cannot be easily quantified so lets get rid of it...an easy target they think?
  • dfa bargf
    by dfa bargf 1 year ago

    bomb shelters louis vuitton outlet as it vowed to press forward with chanel live-fire drills near disputed waters Monday burberry outlet espite North Korea's threat to retaliate, sharply spiking tensions. U.N. diplomats jordan shoes meeting in New York failed to find any solution to ease fears of a new war on the Korean peninsula, nike shoes nearly a month after the North shelled South Korea's adidas shoes Yeonpyeong island in retaliation for earlier artillery exercises there. The North has said it would respond even more harshly to any gucci outlet new drills from the Yellow Sea Abercrombie and Fitch island. South Korea's move to launch new drills from Yeonpyeong brought tensions to their highest prada outlet point since the North's Nov. 23

Please login or sign up to post on this network.
Click here to sign up now.