Health & Safety on a Budget

-

" Health and safety on a budget isn’t a threat, it’s an opportunity. " Waterman

There are often agonised groans from people and organisations having to pay to comply with the law. Whether it’s a hard pressed family finding the money to buy next year’s television licence, or to get the old banger through its MOT, or a company paying its business rates and corporation tax. Whilst it is obviously true that these payments are crucial – after all who wants to lose the BBC, have unroadworthy vehicles clogging up our roads and putting everyone at risk, or local authorities and government incapable of paying to collect the rubbish or pay for teachers. So even when we grumble, we end up paying up, we pay for compliance.

Paying for Health and Safety?
Getting the wallet out for health and safety, when it is often portrayed as a set of ridiculous rules enforced by joyless jobsworths that create a terrible burden on business, may seem like an unnecessary expense but not investing can be a false economy. If you think that safety arrangements are expensive, just try a serious accident. The impact can be enormous – sucking up oodles of management time, demoralising staff, reducing production, ruining reputations, increasing insurance costs…. and of course injuring people and damaging assets. There is no upside to this, a serious accident like someone slipping over on a wet, poorly lit floor and damaging their back will typically cost much much more than acting to reduce the risk of this happening in the first place. So the first element of achieving health and safety on a budget is to recognise that it is a prudent investment even if the return is hard to measure.

How to save
There are two fundamental ways of saving money in health and safety. You can make your efforts more efficient, which means working out how to achieve your aims with less resource. You can make your health and safety programme more effective so that what you invest yields a greater benefit. To do both is wise, to periodically review and see if there are any possible improvements is best of all. So, how to get the best out of your efforts, how to target that mythical bigger bang for your buck? It’s a twin-pronged strategy, so let’s begin with efficiency.

Efficient health and safety
It is possible to regard health and safety as a special, separate activity – so the production manager deals with production, the office manager with the running of the administration.… the warehouse manager, the transport manager, the ward sister etc etc. And then behind them, like the man running behind the cavalry with a shovel to collect for his roses, there is the health and safety officer. Getting the job done is left to the doers, and risk assessments, health and safety training and accident investigation is the job of the health and safety expert. But that means that if you have a lot of health and safety to do, you need a large team. Instead, you could weave health and safety into the day-to-day responsibilities of those managers. Even better, instead of solely relying on them, you could develop a workforce engagement strategy designed to involve everyone in looking after themselves and each other, and they’ll do it as part of their normal work. If this seems obvious, it wasn’t so long ago that a major bank employed a health and safety team that tried to do it all for their managers, and integration saved the bank several hundred thousand pounds a year.

HRreview Logo

Get our essential weekday HR news and updates.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
Keep up with the latest in HR...
This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is hidden when viewing the form
Optin_date
This field is hidden when viewing the form

 

Health @ Work Summit Advert
Click image for details of seminar

Effective health and safety
What really excites H&S professionals is the prospect of making health and safety efforts more effective, and strangely the techniques include much of the above, especially worker engagement. It is extraordinary how many organisations fail to tap into the knowledge of their own staff to identify hazards, assess risks and decide on workable controls. But over and above that, this is an opportunity to focus on what really matters, to make sure that the risks are real and significant, and that the precautions are effective. The opposite of those stories about children wearing protective goggles to play conkers or the banning of hanging baskets lies in the many ways in which you can be more effective by targeting the stuff that really matters. With an expert review of your accident history, with slimming down and simplifying of those complex rule books, you too can ensure that waste and ineffectiveness is eliminated from your health and safety system.

Don’t start from scratch, but don’t make assumptions
If you want to achieve health and safety on a budget, you need to look at your organisation and how it works with a fresh pair of eyes. That’s why so many reviews include an outsider, a fresh perspective. Of course it doesn’t have to be a consultant, a senior manager from another site of a large organisation may be the right challenger of all that received wisdom, all that “because we’ve always done it this way.” But a willingness to ask open questions, to explore why you’re doing things this way that can improve any process applied to health and safety. Often you need extra confidence from professional support, after all we are talking about both legal compliance and the potential to seriously harm people if we get it wrong. But in hard times, health and safety has to show that it too can make a contribution to business survival. And it is very difficult to be a brilliant organisation at managing health and safety but terrible at everything else. It is unlikely that reducing ill health and injuries, the chance of down-time and equipment damage, would not also have a beneficial effect on every other aspect of business activity. Health and safety on a budget isn’t a threat, it’s an opportunity.

By Lawrence Waterman, Head of Health and Safety for the Olympic Delivery Authority. Lawrence is speaking at the Health at Work Summit Click here for more information.

Paul Gray is an entrepreneur and digital publisher who creates online publications focused on solving problems, delivering news, and providing platforms for informed comment and debate. He is associated with HRZone and has built businesses in the HR and professional publishing sector. His work emphasizes creating industry-specific content platforms.

Latest news

‘Job centre in your pocket’ plan raises questions over role of AI in employment support

The government's AI-powered employment assistant has sparked debate about how technology should support jobseekers while maintaining trust.

Employers urged to spot gambling harms during World Cup

Employers are being urged to watch for gambling-related harm at work as the 2026 World Cup brings weeks of daytime matches and betting activity.

Habits for health: small changes that lead to bigger gains

From walking meetings to better sleep routines, simple habits can improve health, wellbeing and performance across the workplace.

Jeanette Wheeler: The business case for purpose-led leadership

Public scrutiny on businesses and societal expectations are putting pressure on leaders to demonstrate that purpose runs deeper than profit.
- Advertisement -

Britain’s biggest retailers cut 18,000 jobs as employment costs rise

Rising wage bills and tax costs are prompting retailers to rethink hiring as they seek savings across their operations.

Georges Elhedery on AI and job losses

“We all know generative AI will destroy certain jobs and will create new jobs.”

Must read

Anne-Marie Archard: Why we need women’s networks in the NHS

Working in the NHS and running the London Leadership Academy, I have been only too aware over the years of the imbalance between the number of women we have working in the NHS, and the number that make it into senior roles.

Zoltán Pethõ: AI is reshaping executive search – and it is happening faster than many expected

The real questions we must confront are clear: how will AI transform the way we work and how will it redefine the way we live and communicate on a broader scale?
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you