RoSPA is spearheading the OSH Skills Commission to address a recruitment and retention crisis facing the occupational safety and health (OSH) business.
The initiative is designed to provide insight and solutions to help OSH professionals tackle a range of challenges threatening workplace safety, including widening skills gaps, the loss of experienced professionals and mounting pressures on remaining staff. These issues are being further compounded by difficulties attracting and retaining talent combined with demands associated with changing working conditions and technology.
The OSH Skills Commission will comprise five groups tasked with coming up with suggested solutions for their respective topic.
The five topics, and commissioners for each, are:
Recruitment of competent people – Claudia Jaksh, chief executive of Policy Connect
- Retention of competent people – Rick Bate, president of the Institute of Occupational Safety & Health (IOSH)
- Consultation and worker representation – Luke Collins, national health & safety officer, Unite the Union
- Wellbeing, culture & psychological safety – Nick Pahl, chief executive of the Society of Occupational Medicine (SOM)
- Technology in OSH – Kate Field, head of people at the British Standards Institute (BSI)
RoSPA vice president Baroness Crawley said: “This commission is born out of difficult circumstances. Our nation faces a growing occupational safety and health skills shortage that is impacting productivity and putting people in danger.
“Our goal is to influence policy through stakeholder engagement and drive informed change to improve skills and competencies in this country, once more positioning the UK as a world leader in health and safety. Together, we have an opportunity to future-proof OSH skills, support national productivity, and build a safer, stronger workforce.”
Explaining Speedy Hire’s support for the OSH Skills Commission, health & safety director Andy Johnson said: “As a time served safety professional, I’ve witnessed both the best and the worst across a wide range of sectors and industries. In recent years, however, a new challenge has emerged: a transient, industry agnostic workforce that moves rapidly between roles to advance their careers. While this brings fresh energy, it also creates skills and knowledge gaps that present new concerns — and new risks — for the OSH profession.”
Nick Pahl, chief executive of the Society of Occupational Medicine (SOM) and OSH Skills Commissioner for wellbeing, culture and psychological safety, said: “The commission is putting skills at the heart of the key issues of recruitment, retention, wellbeing and the impact of technology on workplaces. I also look forward to the commission identifying solutions that will empower people and businesses rather than burdening them. The commissions’ focus on strengthening the worker voice and identifying the most innovative and promising skill areas will improve health outcomes across the UK.”
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