HSE Costs Recovery will scare employers from seeking advice

-

Nearly half of leading employers surveyed at the IOSH conference in March by business law firm, DWF, admitted to having apprehensions about the new Fee for Intervention (FFI).

The new FFI cost, which the Government recently announced will now be delayed until the autumn, will be incurred when a contravention – that is a failure to observe health and safety law requiring a formal action – is discovered during a HSE inspection or investigation. The business will continue to accrue FFI until the business has put matters right with the support of the HSE.

Steffan Groch, Head of Regulatory Litigation, at DWF said:

“Almost half of all respondents (47%) are concerned that the introduction of the Fee for Intervention will make businesses think twice before seeking advice from the HSE.

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

 

“More worrying still, a quarter weren’t aware of the HSE’s proposals, despite the obvious impacts on their businesses – a sign perhaps that the proposals have failed to be publicised sufficiently.”

Groch continued:

“While most of the nations’ leading employers are accepting of the new scheme, there is deep rooted anxiety that the high costs of FFI will have negative effects on British businesses. 49% of respondents said the £124 per hour cost of FFI is likely to negatively and disproportionately impact upon small and medium sized businesses.

“Alarmingly a third of employers we surveyed rejected the proposals all together.

“For those who are supporting the introduction of FFI, there is a desire to see that the HSE implements the scheme fairly, and the conference attendees showed widespread support for the application of a sliding cost scale, based on the size of the business, ability to pay, and the type of intervention that the HSE has to undertake.

“While we will have to wait to see what the true cost is to British businesses it appears we will be waiting in the dark as businesses are left without the well-overdue guidance they require to adequately prepare for this overhaul of the system.”

Pamela Flores is an events professional with experience at Symposium Events, a UK-based conference and events organization. She has worked in editorial and event coordination roles within the HR and expatriate management sector, contributing to the organization of major conferences including the Expatriate Management and Global Mobility conference. Her background spans online editorial work and events management within the professional conference industry.

Latest news

Lauren Webb: Empowering women to lead the way in analytics and AI

Women remain wildly underrepresented in technical and digital leadership, making up just 22% of the UK’s AI talent. It’s jarring.

Employers urged to balance flexibility and fairness as England’s World Cup campaign begins

Employment lawyers are advising organisations to plan ahead for leave requests and workplace flexibility as the 2026 FIFA World Cup gets under way.

Amy Coleman on uncertainty and pressure at work

“Many of you shared feelings of uncertainty and pressure as the work evolves.”

Workers fear favouritism is driving workplace rewards and recognition

Many UK employees believe workplace rewards are influenced by favouritism, with women significantly less likely to view recognition as fair.
- Advertisement -

Curtis Holmes: Payroll is the driver for employee engagement

Payroll has long been treated as a back-office necessity: essential, but not something that shapes culture or drives engagement. This no longer stands.

Labour market yet to show major AI impact on jobs, govt adviser says

A government economic adviser has challenged predictions of widespread AI-driven unemployment, arguing labour market data has yet to show disruption.

Must read

Alex Wilke: Moving on from the annual employee engagement survey

Annual employee engagement surveys are a regular event at...

Chris Coughlan: Top GDPR issues for HR

Implementation of the GDPR will require several parts of the business working together to ensure that all aspects of data storage and processing within the business is GDPR ready.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you