Health and Safety

Quick Overview

Health and Safety Law — Key Facts

The Health and Safety Executive is the national regulator responsible for enforcing health and safety law in England, Wales, and Scotland. Employers carry a non-delegable legal responsibility to protect workers and non-workers from risks arising from work activities.

  • The 1974 Act: The Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 requires employers to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety, and welfare of all workers and others affected by their undertaking.
  • Reasonably Practicable: This is a legal standard that requires a proportionate response: the greater the risk, the more must be done to mitigate it. Cost, time, and effort are relevant to the assessment.
  • Mandatory Policies: Employers with five or more employees must have a written Health and Safety policy.
  • RIDDOR Reporting: Certain injuries — including fractures, amputations, and loss of consciousness — and dangerous occurrences must be reported to the HSE under RIDDOR 2013.
  • Fee for Intervention: Where the HSE identifies a material breach during an inspection, the business is charged for the inspector's time spent identifying and addressing the issue.

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Health and Safety Law in England and Wales

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is the national regulator responsible for enforcing health and safety law in England, Wales, and Scotland. Employers carry a non-delegable legal responsibility to protect workers and non-workers from risks arising from work activities. Investigations are commonly triggered by RIDDOR-reportable incidents, complaints, or routine inspections.

The Primary Legislation — Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974

The Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (HSWA) places a general duty on employers to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety, and welfare of their employees and of any other persons who may be affected by their undertaking. The Act also imposes duties on employees to take reasonable care for their own safety and that of others, and to cooperate with their employer on health and safety matters.

The standard of reasonable practicability requires a proportionate assessment: the level of risk on one side of the balance, and the cost — in time, money, and effort — of eliminating or mitigating that risk on the other. The higher the risk, the less the cost is permitted to outweigh it.

Key Duties for Employers

Risk Management

Under the Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations 1999, employers must identify hazards in the workplace, assess the level of risk they present, and implement appropriate controls. The preferred hierarchy of control is to eliminate the hazard; where that is not possible, to reduce the risk to the lowest reasonably practicable level.

Appointing a Competent Person

Every employer must appoint one or more competent persons to assist in meeting their health and safety obligations. Competence requires sufficient training, experience, and knowledge to carry out the relevant functions. While external consultants may be appointed, the ultimate legal responsibility remains with the employer.

RIDDOR Reporting

The Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013 (RIDDOR) require employers to report certain categories of workplace incident to the HSE. Reportable events include fatalities, specified injuries (including fractures, amputations, and loss of sight), over-seven-day incapacitation injuries, occupational diseases, and dangerous occurrences.

The HSE Investigation Process

An HSE investigation serves a dual purpose: it seeks to establish the cause of an incident to prevent recurrence, and it gathers evidence for a potential criminal prosecution. Investigations can be lengthy, often involving expert evidence, the examination of documentary records, and formal interviews under caution conducted in accordance with PACE.

The Fee for Intervention scheme applies where an inspector identifies a material breach serious enough to require a formal Notice of Contravention. The business is charged for the time spent by the HSE in identifying the breach and supporting the business in returning to compliance.

Consequences of Prosecution

A conviction for a health and safety offence can have serious and lasting consequences. Courts assess fines by reference to the Sentencing Council guidelines, which take into account the culpability of the offending organisation, the level of harm caused or risked, and the size and financial resources of the defendant. Fines in the Crown Court can run into hundreds of thousands of pounds or more for larger organisations. For individual directors and managers, serious breaches can result in a custodial sentence.

Additional consequences include reputational damage, difficulty in tendering for public contracts, increased insurance premiums, and the risk of civil claims from those who have suffered injury.

HSE Enforcement Notices

The HSE can issue Improvement Notices, requiring specified changes to be made within a defined period, or Prohibition Notices, which prohibit the continuation of an activity immediately where there is a risk of serious personal injury. Breach of either type of notice is itself a criminal offence.

What to Do if You Are Under Investigation

If the HSE has attended your premises following an incident, served a notice, or indicated that a formal investigation is underway, seek specialist legal advice immediately. The period between the start of an investigation and any charging decision is the most important stage for making representations to the HSE and the CPS. Do not attend any interview under caution without a solicitor present.

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Health and Safety FAQ

What does "reasonably practicable" mean in practice?
It requires a proportionate response: the greater the risk, the more you must do to reduce it. Cost and practicability are factors, but the higher the potential harm, the less weight those considerations carry.
Does every workplace incident need to be reported to the HSE?
Only incidents that fall within the RIDDOR categories — including fatalities, specified injuries, over-seven-day incapacitation injuries, occupational diseases, and dangerous occurrences. Not every accident is reportable, but failure to report a qualifying incident is itself a criminal offence.
Can a director be personally prosecuted for a health and safety breach?
Yes. Where a health and safety offence committed by a company is attributable to the consent, connivance, or neglect of a director or senior manager, that individual can be prosecuted and, in serious cases, imprisoned.
What is the Fee for Intervention?
Where an HSE inspector identifies a material breach during an inspection, the business is charged an hourly rate for the inspector's time spent identifying the breach and ensuring the business returns to compliance. This is separate from any fine imposed by a court.
Regulatory

Health and Safety

Facing this allegation is serious — and often unexpected. Early specialist advice makes all the difference to the outcome.

Quick Overview
Health and Safety Law — Key Facts

The Health and Safety Executive is the national regulator responsible for enforcing health and safety law in England, Wales, and Scotland. Employers carry a non-delegable legal responsibility to protect workers and non-workers from risks arising from work activities.

  • The 1974 ActThe HSWA 1974 requires employers to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety, and welfare of all workers and others affected by their undertaking.
  • Reasonably PracticableA proportionate legal standard: the greater the risk, the more must be done to mitigate it. Cost, time, and effort are relevant to the assessment.
  • Mandatory PoliciesEmployers with five or more employees must have a written Health and Safety policy.
  • RIDDOR ReportingCertain injuries — including fractures, amputations, and loss of consciousness — and dangerous occurrences must be reported to the HSE under RIDDOR 2013.
  • Fee for InterventionWhere the HSE identifies a material breach during an inspection, the business is charged for the inspector's time spent identifying and addressing the issue.
Full article below ↓

Key Duties for Employers

The Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 places a general duty on employers to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety, and welfare of their employees and of any other persons who may be affected by their undertaking. The standard requires a proportionate assessment: the higher the risk, the less cost can outweigh it.

  • Risk Management: Employers must identify hazards, assess the level of risk, and implement appropriate controls — eliminating the hazard where possible, or reducing risk to the lowest reasonably practicable level.
  • Competent Person: Every employer must appoint one or more competent persons to assist in meeting health and safety obligations.
  • RIDDOR Reporting: Reportable events include fatalities, specified injuries, over-seven-day incapacitation injuries, occupational diseases, and dangerous occurrences.

The HSE Investigation Process

An HSE investigation serves a dual purpose: it seeks to establish the cause of an incident to prevent recurrence, and it gathers evidence for a potential criminal prosecution. Investigations can be lengthy, often involving expert evidence, the examination of documentary records, and formal interviews under caution.

"The period between the start of an investigation and any charging decision is the most important stage for making representations to the HSE and the CPS."

— Lostock Legal Solicitors
HSE investigation underway?
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Consequences of Prosecution

Courts assess fines by reference to the Sentencing Council guidelines, which take into account culpability, the level of harm caused or risked, and the size and financial resources of the defendant. Fines in the Crown Court can run into hundreds of thousands of pounds. For individual directors and managers, serious breaches can result in a custodial sentence.

HSE Enforcement Notices

The HSE can issue Improvement Notices, requiring specified changes within a defined period, or Prohibition Notices, which prohibit the continuation of an activity immediately where there is a risk of serious personal injury. Breach of either type of notice is itself a criminal offence.

What to Do if You Are Under Investigation

If the HSE has attended your premises following an incident, served a notice, or indicated that a formal investigation is underway, seek specialist legal advice immediately. Do not attend any interview under caution without a solicitor present.

Get in touch

Speak to a specialist

Health & safety defence · SRA regulated


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Common questions

Health and Safety FAQ

It requires a proportionate response: the greater the risk, the more you must do to reduce it. Cost and practicability are factors, but the higher the potential harm, the less weight those considerations carry.

Only incidents that fall within the RIDDOR categories — including fatalities, specified injuries, over-seven-day incapacitation injuries, occupational diseases, and dangerous occurrences. Not every accident is reportable, but failure to report a qualifying incident is itself a criminal offence.

Yes. Where a health and safety offence committed by a company is attributable to the consent, connivance, or neglect of a director or senior manager, that individual can be prosecuted and, in serious cases, imprisoned.

Where an HSE inspector identifies a material breach during an inspection, the business is charged an hourly rate for the inspector's time spent identifying the breach and ensuring the business returns to compliance. This is separate from any fine imposed by a court.