When I’m writing for work, I learn much more about things
that normally wouldn’t interest me very much. Sometimes I find that it changes
the way I think about the topics. This morning I was writing about health and
safety laws and evacuation chairs. I was reminded of when, many years ago, I
started a teaching job at a further education college.
On the first day I had to join several other new employees
for induction training. Part of it covered safe manual handling and using
evacuation chairs. I now know it was woefully inadequate, really just paying
lip service to what the law required. We didn’t take any of it
seriously. Even the tutors seemed to operate with tongue in cheek.
When it came to operating the evacuation chairs, volunteers
were required to sit in the chair at the top of a flight of stairs so that each
of us could have a go at moving them down. I didn’t volunteer as I was afraid
of being tipped out. And the short session came to an end before it was my turn
to handle the chair, for which I breathed a sigh of relief. We were not advised
about techniques for getting a person from
a wheelchair into the evac chair, and I wouldn’t expect that any of us felt really
capable of taking charge in an emergency. Thank goodness it was never necessary
in my time and I didn’t have any vulnerable people in my classes when the fire
drill was tested.
Many of us still find health and safety regulations a joke,
but I had to check out the news items on the Health and Safety Executive’s
website. I was horrified at some of the incidents that were reported, and at
what organisations had been prosecuted for. Of course, it does become a joke
when companies take it too far out of ignorance about how to comply – it really
isn’t necessary to carry out a risk assessment on using a tape measure or put
guidelines on how to walk upstairs on the staff noticeboard. Still, I’m not
going to be so dismissive of health and safety considerations in future.
4 comments:
Interesting. But when the recommendations are taken to the point of being silly, people stop listening to the stuff they should listen to.
A subject close to my heart, Jean. Even after the Rana Plaza disaster, factory owners here are reluctant to put install safety equipment as required. All their are interested in are their profits. I would like to see a few factories closed...and don't worry, the workers will easily find work elsewhere.
No, I agree. I think that the problem with health and safety is that so many people use it because they can't be bothered to deal with something, so they say it can't be done because of health and safety.
Thanks for comments, folks. I guess there are plenty of problems around H&S regulations.
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