The Health & Safety Executive risks pushing companies into bankruptcy by accusing firms of the committing the most serious offences when they have in reality committed lesser breaches, a leading lawyer has warned. Speaking on the eve of Safety and Health Expo at ExCel, London, Vikki Woodfine, Partner at law firm DWF LLP and Lead Commentator for Health and Safety professional information service Croner-i, said some companies could be forced to the wall by fines that could see medium sized firms fined up to £4m for health and safety offences. As well as potentially ruinous fines, companies were also having to bear the cost of contested cases because the Health & Safety Executive was adopting a policy of bringing cases at the highest level of culpability (and hence penalty) in “the vast majority of cases” forcing firms to go to court to argue for a lesser offence. Woodfine urged the HSE to take a “fairer” approach and a more realistic view of culpability and harm when bringing cases to court if it wanted to reduce the number of contested cases which placed a heavy burden on public funds as well as the companies being prosecuted. She also warned that, in order to secure the new higher fines, the HSE would look to charge the parent company in a larger group as well as the firm alleged to have committed the offence. “As the sentencing guidelines for health and safety offences have now bedded in and high fines are increasingly the norm, the next phase that will be interesting to watch from the courts is how they deal with group companies. It is unlikely to be long before we see a case where an attempt is made by the courts to sentence an organisation based on the turnover/financials of a “linked organisation” i.e., the Group or Parent Company.” She said: “In practice, companies are now faced with the most impossible of dilemmas when it comes to deciding whether to defend a prosecution. There has always been a fine reduction when pleading guilty and this remains the case. However, given the new fine levels, there has been an increase in the number of defended cases as companies simply cannot just accept their fate anymore given that the guidelines expose them to potentially business ending fines. “The guidelines have introduced a very real fear for small and medium-sized organisations that even if they plead guilty… they may still have to pay a fine where the starting point is £250,000 or more, which is often a prospect that could put them out of business. “Consequently, the advice to duty holders is changing, with many companies now seeking to test the prosecution evidence before a jury. While the company runs the risk of being found guilty, the judge may place the offence into a lower bracket in the guidelines, thereby reducing the overall penalty. “We are often seeing the HSE start the vast majority of cases saying that they are High Culpability, Category 1 Harm. The defence then seeks to say Low Culpability, Category 3 Harm and the hope then is that the judge will decide Medium Culpability, Category 2 Harm. But there is no certainty in this approach, and with the HSE stating cases at their highest point, companies cannot take the risk and are contesting cases “If the HSE wishes to see a reduction in contested trials (which take up significant manpower for them and a cost risk) a fairer approach from the HSE has to be adopted whereby it takes a more realistic view of culpability and harm at the outset.” Wolters Kluwer will be showcasing the Croner-i suite of products at Safety and Health Expo which runs at ExCel, London from 20-22 June. For more information go to www.wolterskluwer.co.uk DATA ANALYSIS Health and safety offences From 1 February 2016, the entire sentencing landscape for health and safety offences changed resulting in a cataclysmic shift upwards in fine levels. These changes came in through the Health and Safety and Corporate Manslaughter Sentencing Guidelines which represented the biggest shake up to the regulatory landscape in recent years, with fines up to 10 times higher (or more in some cases), than their previous levels. Not only are companies now being targeted by increased fines but individuals are being prosecuted more and we are seeing cases of imprisonment of directors and managers in cases where that would have been unheard of previously. In such cases, when considering fine levels, the company’s turnover is the relevant figure for the court to look at. The guidelines classify corporate entities by reference to turnover: micro up to £2 million; small £2–10 million, medium, £10–50 million and large more than £50 million. Very large (where judges are given discretion to move beyond these parameters) does not have its own bracket, but the guidelines suggest this would include a company with a turnover of over £900 million. This is a worrying prospect for many hauliers, given that transport is often a high turnover business, albeit with a relatively modest profit margin. Once the company size has been determined from its turnover, the guidelines then calculate a fine level (with a range of potential sentences and an indicated starting point) based on a calculation taking into account turnover, risk of harm and culpability. Importantly the guidelines do not require actual harm to have occurred (although it will be an aggravating feature), only the risk of harm. Therefore previously innocuous risks could now lead to prosecutions where a risk of serious injury or even death is proven. This is the area that often causes surprise to dutyholders now and there have been a number of cases, including cases attracting fines in excess of £1 million, where there has been no harm at all, only a risk of harm. For example, the case of ConocoPhillips where there was a risk from a gas leak, but no harm caused. This case saw a fine of £3 million imposed, (which would have been