Government to review health and safety laws
Veteran Conservative politician David Young will carry out a government-wide review into health and safety laws and the growth of a "compensation culture," Prime Minister Cameron's office said on Monday.
Young, appointed adviser to the prime minister on health and safety law and practice, will investigate concerns over how health and safety laws are applied and report back to Cameron in the summer, the government said.
Young will then work with government departments to bring his proposals into effect.
"The rise of the compensation culture over the last 10 years is a real concern, as is the way health and safety rules are sometimes applied," Cameron said in a statement.
"We need a sensible new approach that makes clear these laws are intended to protect people, not overwhelm businesses with red tape. I look forward to receiving Lord Young's recommendations on how we can best achieve that." The Conservatives had already announced last December that Lord Young, who held several cabinet posts in Margaret Thatcher's government in the 1980s, would conduct an audit of health and safety legislation.
Cameron promised before the May election to reform Britain's "over-the-top" health and safety culture, saying it had become a straitjacket on personal initiative and responsibility.
He cited newspaper stories about children being made to wear goggles by their head teacher to play conkers. Unions accused him of peddling myths and urged politicians not to undermine a consensus over health and safety.
Cameron has also attacked a growing compensation culture, with highly publicised claims for injuries creating a legal "hypersensitivity" to risk and accidents.
http://uk.mg40.mail.yahoo.com/dc/lau...=7fiulmn6hqeb7
Veteran Conservative politician David Young will carry out a government-wide review into health and safety laws and the growth of a "compensation culture," Prime Minister Cameron's office said on Monday.
Young, appointed adviser to the prime minister on health and safety law and practice, will investigate concerns over how health and safety laws are applied and report back to Cameron in the summer, the government said.
Young will then work with government departments to bring his proposals into effect.
"The rise of the compensation culture over the last 10 years is a real concern, as is the way health and safety rules are sometimes applied," Cameron said in a statement.
"We need a sensible new approach that makes clear these laws are intended to protect people, not overwhelm businesses with red tape. I look forward to receiving Lord Young's recommendations on how we can best achieve that." The Conservatives had already announced last December that Lord Young, who held several cabinet posts in Margaret Thatcher's government in the 1980s, would conduct an audit of health and safety legislation.
Cameron promised before the May election to reform Britain's "over-the-top" health and safety culture, saying it had become a straitjacket on personal initiative and responsibility.
He cited newspaper stories about children being made to wear goggles by their head teacher to play conkers. Unions accused him of peddling myths and urged politicians not to undermine a consensus over health and safety.
Cameron has also attacked a growing compensation culture, with highly publicised claims for injuries creating a legal "hypersensitivity" to risk and accidents.
http://uk.mg40.mail.yahoo.com/dc/lau...=7fiulmn6hqeb7
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