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New health & safety fines raise stakes for non-compliant employers

New health & safety fines raise stakes for non-compliant employers

Newly-introduced sentencing guidelines for health and safety offences mean it’s more important than ever that employers stay on top of their safety obligations. Article from work equipment supplier Slingsby.

The changes were introduced on 1st February 2016 as part of the Definitive Guideline for the Sentencing of Health and Safety, Corporate Manslaughter and Food Safety and Hygiene offences published by the Sentencing Council for England Wales. For the first time, it gives courts in England and Wales comprehensive sentencing guidelines covering the most common regulatory offences. The guidance means businesses with an annual turnover of more than £50 million can face fines of up to £10 million for health and safety offences and those convicted of corporate manslaughter can be fined up to £20 million.  These figures can increase even further for very large organisations.  

Slingsby supplies more than 35,000 workplace products across all industries, including an extensive range of health and safety equipment.  Lee Wright, Group Sales and Marketing Director at Slingsby, explains: “The idea of these changes is to create a level of consistency when it comes to punishing health and safety offences.  Fines are now based on the seriousness of an offence, the amount of harm caused, the culpability of the offender and the offending organisation’s turnover. “The guidelines set a starting point for fines depending on each of these factors along with a number of other mitigating and aggravating influences that the courts can then take into account before deciding on a punishment.” 

Lee adds: “As a result, fines are likely to soar above their current levels, which will be a wake-up call to any companies that fail to take their health and safety obligations seriously.  This means all companies must ensure they are investing properly in continually improving their health and safety procedures, in order to be as compliant as possible and protect both employers and the public from accidents, injuries and ill-health. “Ultimately the benefits this brings, as well as the costs associated with such preventative measures, will be far more favourable than facing the fines that come with the new sentencing regime.”

www.slingsby.com

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