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Public safety – the evolving Public safety – the evolving scenescene
David Ball (www.davidjball.com)
Centre for Decision Analysis & Risk Management Middlesex University
www.mdx.ac.uk/risk
The Arboricultural Association
National Amenity Arboriculture Conference 2012
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Significant events since 2011
1. “Reclaiming healthand safety for all: An independent review ofhealth and safety legislation”
byProfessor Ragnar E. LöfstedtNovember 2011
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a. The primary legislation is okay (HSWA)
Key points from the Löfstedt Review
All measures which are “reasonably practicable” must be implemented
Cost, time, difficulty of control measure
Benefit of control measure (i.e. the reduced risk)
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b. There are issues in interpreting ‘reasonable practicability’
Key points from the Löfstedt Review
Cost, time, difficulty of control measure
Benefit of control measure (i.e. the reduced risk)
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b. There are issues in interpreting ‘reasonable practicability’
Key points from the Löfstedt Review
Cost, time, difficulty of control measure
Benefit of control measure (i.e. the reduced risk)
• I regularly meet people who work in H&S who have little or even no idea of the meaning of reasonable practicability
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c. We live in a ‘risk-based’ society (not ‘hazard-based’)
Key points from the Löfstedt Review
“We have also taken the opportunity to dispel any notion that we are moving away from a risk-based approach.” HSE, R2P2, p vi
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c. We live in a ‘risk-based’ society (not ‘hazard-based’)
Key points from the Löfstedt Review
Hazard-based thinkingThat’s a hazard.Eliminate it.
Risk-based thinkingThat’s a hazard.What’s the risk?Decide what to do.
“We have also taken the opportunity to dispel any notion that we are moving away from a risk-based approach.” HSE, R2P2, p vi
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Five principles:
• trees provide a wide variety of benefits to society• trees are living organisms that naturally lose branches or fall• the overall risk to human safety is extremely small• tree owners have a legal duty of care• a balanced and proportionate approach to safety is required
How does RBA fit in with Risk Assessment?How does RBA fit in with Risk Assessment?
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a) Before it. Assess the benefits. Then do a conventional risk assessment
b) It’s a 3-way trade-off between benefits of a thing (tree),cost of control, and benefit (risk-reduction) of control
c) RBA is an acceptable form of risk assessment