Regulate not ridicule October 1st 2007 The Institution of Occupational safety and Health
(IOSH) has again called for the health and safety
profession to be officially regulated
Speaking at the Public
Services Group's Annual
Dinner at the National Safety
Symposium in Nottingham,
Ray Hurst, IOSH President-
Elect, said regulating the
health and safety profession
was important for raising
standards and helping
eliminate some of the crazy
stories that appear in the
media.
"Currently, anyone can set
up as a health and safety
consultant or adviser with no
qualifications or verifiable
competence. This is
something that needs to
change. The advice health
and safety professionals give
can be the difference
between life and death.
"If people purporting to
be from our profession give
bad advice, people could be
killed or seriously injured. At
the same time, failure to use
proper advice can stop
people living their lives and
lead to health and safety
being wrongly 'blamed' for
banning things, threatening
conkers games, school trips
and Remembrance Day
parades!"
Ray explained "Regulation
would mean that to practice
in occupational health and
safety, people would need to
satisfy certain competence
criteria – such as having
relevant qualifications and
experience.
"Once people are legally
required to prove they hold
certain qualifications or
experience before practicing,
perhaps some of the crazier
'bonkers conkers' stories will
be prevented and the
reputation of the health and
safety professional raised to
the level it truly deserves."
He closed saying: "Legally
regulating health and safety
and requiring practitionerlevel
professional
membership, will allow us to
prevent unqualified people
from practicing, provide
assurance to the general
public and also protect the
good standing of the
profession.
"In the event that a
health and safety
professional does fall below
the standard, they can be
disciplined and in serious
cases, 'struck off'. So, we see
regulation as an important
safeguard against 'rogue'
operators and poor practice,
potentially benefiting
workers, employers and the
general public alike."
IOSH has launched a Get
the Best campaign to
encourage employers and
recruiters to get the right
level of health and safety
advice for jobs they
advertise and to encourage
the media to seek the views
of the profession in their
stories. More articles from IOSH: |