FFI should stay, says independent report
Review panel concludes that HSE’s Fee for Intervention scheme has proven effective and should be retained
A SCHEME designed to shift the cost of regulating workplace health and safety from the public purse to businesses who break the law has proven effective and should stay, an independent report has concluded.
The report recognized that inspectors at the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) have implemented ‘Fee for Intervention’ (FFI) consistently and fairly since it started in October 2012, and found no evidence to suggest that enforcement policy decisions had been influenced in any way by its introduction.
The independent panel which conducted the review was chaired by Alan Harding, professor of public policy at Liverpool University. Other participants were representatives of the GMB trade union, the Federation of Small Businesses and the Department for Work and Pensions.
According to the report’s authors, the professional approach adopted by the HSE’s inspectors has ensured any challenges raised by the scheme during its first 18 months were minimized.
The evidence suggests the concerns voiced about FFI have not manifested themselves to any significant or serious extent and that ‘generally inspectors and duty-holders continue to work together in improving health and safety management’.
Judith Hackitt, chair of the HSE, said: ‘Both the HSE and the Government believe it is right that those who fail to meet their legal health and safety obligations should pay our costs, and acceptance of this principle is growing.
‘This review gives us confidence that FFI is working effectively and should be retained. We will continue to monitor the performance of Fee for Intervention to ensure it remains consistent and fair.’
The report, published by HSE last week (4 September), along with associated research papers, concludes that ‘it [FFI] has proven effective in achieving the overarching policy aim of shifting the cost of health and safety regulation from the public purse to those businesses who break health and safety laws’.
It also concludes that: fears that FFI would be used to generate revenue have proven to be unfounded; while not popular with some inspectors and duty-holders, it has been embedded effectively and applied consistently; and there is no viable alternative that can achieve the same aims.