I'm in a McDonald's restaurant, and a guy is installing steel retaining cables above each of the speakers. Apparently this is a health and safety ruling in case on of the speakers escapes, and falls on a customer. They are installed pretty securely, and it looks as if the speaker is actually larger than the installation hole. There have been no recorded cases of speakers falling down on customers in any British McDonalds. What a stupid waste of money that is being forced on food retailers that are facing new economic challenges in a changing market place.
First I would argue that this H&S ruling isn't directed specifically at McDonalds, but is applicable much more widely. Whilst a big multinational such as McDonalds probably already has processes in place to ensure that any work is carried out safely, and a team dedicated to H&S, the likelihood is that for much smaller businesses and independent traders the standards can be much lower, and legislative intervention is needed to ensure that the public are reasonably protected. McDonalds installing a speaker can be very different to a random shopkeeper with a screwdriver and a penchant for DIY trying to wedge something in above a doorway.
Second I would say that because H&S standards are so broadly applicable, it is easy to find individual cases that seem absurd. The general trend however is a different matter. In the UK, the
Health and Safety at Work Act (1974) is the basis for current H&S, and is an important milestone. Let's look at recent trends:
Number of fatal injuries to employees(RIDDOR and earlier reporting legislation, Great Britain)
Rate of self-reported workplace non-fatal injury(LFS, Great Britain; estimated rate per 100,000 workers)
Rate of employer-reported non-fatal injury(RIDDOR, Great Britain; rate per 100,000 employees)
https://www.hse.gov.uk/statistics/history/index.htmThe first chart is the most illustrative of the overall pattern, as it covers the full period from introduction of the Act, and shows a very clear trend. However, if we look at the other charts, particularly employer-reported non-fatals, we can see that the pattern is still, even now in the age of 'health and safety gone mad', a reduction year-on-year.
So I would argue that whilst certain individual instances of H&S requirements may appear ridiculous, and whilst I'm sure the industry has its share of petty jobsworths who delight in enforcing regulations, H&S as viewed overall is still tremendously important and
does improve health and
does improve safety.