Cameron currently editing new disaster movie inspired by ‘Cable Guy’.

Speaking from the set of his latest movie in a bunker in Westminster David Cameron explains the exciting themes running through his film to our media land report,  A. Worker.

Worker

So mr Cameron tell us why you are dismantling years of health and fety regulation and taking us back to the the Victorian era.

 

Cameron

Well we bilud a time machine and take the workers back to 1812.

 

If I may just stop you there. I am taking my audience back before the Victorian era. I have  vision of a Britain where businesses went about their busines unfettered by rules and restrivtion. My preferred era would be the Middle ages.medieval  

 

RoSPA ‘hits the nail on the head’ in ground-breaking analysis of accident statistics

In a ground-breaking review of government statistics, The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents (RoSPA) says the ‘true impact’ of accidents is hidden.

According to the charity, there should be a “fundamental re-appraisal” of government public health priorities with a focus on premature and preventable deaths. On that basis, action to curb accidents should be the number one priority, it says.

Official figures show accidents account for just 2% of deaths in England and Wales – far behind cancer, and heart and respiratory disease, but RoSPA says this conceals the true impact of unintentional injuries in a report drawing on data from the Office for National Statistics to argue for a new approach to public health.

“We are faced with an accident epidemic that’s wiping out people in their prime”

Tom Mullarkey, Chief Executive, RoSPA

 

The charity calculated the years of life lost as a result of premature death, based on the average number of years which those who died could have been expected to live.

This moved accidents up the priority list, because many victims die young.

RoSPA then filtered out deaths which could not have been prevented.

THE KEY FINDING:

RoSPA found that up to the age of 60, accidents were the leading cause of preventable years of life lost, accounting for 23% of the total.

 

On the back of this extremely important finding we ask the government and the insurance industry two simple questions…

Where’s the ‘compensation culture’ in these figures?

Why are you intent on dismantling health and safety regulations in the UK when people are dying from preventable accidents?

RoSPA’s chief executive, Tom Mullarkey, says this is one of the most important findings in its 95-year history.

He says there is a “moral obligation” to prevent people dying before their time.

“We all know about diseases and the resources that are pumped into preventing the deaths they cause, but if only a fraction of that resource was used to prevent accidents we would not be faced, as we are today, with an accident epidemic that’s wiping out people in their prime.”

The charity says schemes to prevent accidents achieve quick results and can generate huge savings for the NHS. It wants extra support and information for people at key moments in their lives – including teenagers, parents and carers of young children, and people over 65.

RoSPA states that in England alone £1bn each year should be set aside to achieve this. The charity estimates that currently less than £1m is spent annually on these schemes.

In a statement, the Department of Health insisted that accident prevention was a key part of its approach to public health….aye, right.

In the light of government attacks on worker health and safety and a general downgrading of risk assessment and accident prevention, we can only hope that RoSPA’s voice is heard above the din of the insurance industry wailing about the costs of saving people’s lives…

This report should be required reading at Cabinet level and hopefully will be an antidote to the relentless dismantling of the nation’s health and safety regualtions.

Great-grandmother tragically mauled to death by family dogs

Fresh calls were made for a change in the law in England and Wales today after a great-grandmother was apparently mauled to death by her daughter’s dogs in her back garden.

The five animals pounced on Gloria Knowles, 71, after she went into the garden to give them their evening meal as a favour to her daughter, Beverley Mason.

The widow was badly injured when the dogs – two ‘giant’ Bordeaux French mastiffs, two American bulldogs and a small mongrel – seemed to suddenly turn on her.

She was found dead at the scene in Morden, South London on Tuesday night.

Currently, in England and Wales, police can only prosecute owners of dogs who harm people if the attack happens in public – and they can only forcibly remove illegal dogs.

THE LAW IN SCOTLAND RELATING TO DANGEROUS DOGS

Follow this link for our comments on dangerous dogs and The Control of Dogs (Scotland)Act:

http://news.bonnarandco.com/tag/dangerousdogs

Today further calls were made for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) to change the law to allow dog control rules to apply everywhere.

As we noted yesterday, the Communications Union CWU, which represents postal workers in the UK, is campaigning to change the law and said the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991 is failing to protect both dog owners and attack victims.

They pointed to two incidents where postmen in Cambridge and Sheffield almost lost limbs while carrying out their duties. The man who owned two rottweilers that almost tore off the Cambridge postman’s arm in2008 escaped prosecution.

The tragedy in this incident is that a much-loved mother and grand-mother is dead and a family is left devastated by their loss.

Whiplash claims – the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth…

My car was damaged recently. It was in a car park and I was somewhere else. I claimed on my own insurance, and was directed by them to a repair garage who took my mobile number, ostensibly to contact me when the car was ready. They did not. Instead they sold on my details to a claims management company . I know this because I received a text a week later telling me that I had been in an accident and was entitled to £2,750.00. Coincidentally, the insurance industry blamed a projected rise of 13% in premiums on the rise in personal injury claims.

Whiplash claims now make up 70% of all motor accident claims. Typically neck and back symptoms might last 3 – 6 months with the courts awarding damages of between £1,500 – £3,000, so the claims themselves are not large. However it is an injury which has few objective signs and there is a clear temptation for fraud and exaggeration.

Evidence was placed before the Transport Select Committee in 2011 that the insurance industry loses £2.1bn per annum to fraudulent claims, whether by “cash for crash” staged accidents or invention of symptoms. The industry presents a story of the honest citizen paying the price for a system milked by the unscrupulous.

The first point to make is that the number of claims in Scotland is dwarfed by those of our English neighbours. Figures obtained from the Compensation Recovery Unit show that instead of a proportion of around one tenth based on population, the figure is one twenty fifth.

The Commons Transport Committee Report “The Cost of Motor Insurance” noted that other countries without the whiplash problem included France, Germany, Spain and ………Scotland.

The reason is that Scotland has few claims management companies, and a minimal referral market.

A brief tour round the road traffic claims industry might illuminate where the real opportunities are:-

1. Claims Management Companies These are not lawyers. Their business model consists in the identification and encouragement of possible claimants.

Details are then sold on to solicitors for amounts of between £250 to £600. They operate customer friendly 24 hour helplines and have a ubiquitous online and TV presence. It is claimed that they fulfil a need in that people are too intimidated to speak to a lawyer. Whilst that may have been the case 20 years ago, is it really true of the current consumer? For anyone who can operate a mouse or turn the Yellow Pages, this is an introductory dating service which is wholly unnecessary.

2. Credit Hire Companies These companies will provide a replacement vehicle whilst yours is being repaired. They will have paid a referral fee generally of around £500, typically to a body shop. Their hire costs greatly exceed the market rates. These will then be transferred to the insurer of the at fault driver. An example of the business model in operation is the 2010 case of Clark v. City of Edinburgh Council .

After examining the credit hire arrangement the judge concluded that the unwitting pursuer was effectively required to raise proceedings for the sole purpose of recovering his credit hire payments . His 14 year old Toyota Celica (value of £1,000 with 91,000 miles) had been damaged and the Accident Exchange Company provided a replacement Honda Civic 2 litre GT with 900 miles on the clock. The hapless Mr. Clark then racked up daily hire costs of £161.63. He sued for a total of £12, 857.13. In a withering judgement Lord Turnbull held that a “new vehicle for old” hire approach was not appropriate and awarded him a total of £1,950.00.

3. Your own insurance company Insurers frequently incorporate an add-on which provides legal cover . The claimant is then referred to the insurer’s panel solicitor . You may believe that this recommendation is of a badge of quality. In fact the insurer receives a referral fee for every claimant. The industry is coy about the value of these backhanders, but estimates vary between £2 – 4 billion per annum. These payments never appear in the industry analysis of cost per claim against premium income.

There may be further conditions whereby the solicitor agrees to direct the client to specific medico-legal practices or car hire firms, generating more referral fees. Road traffic claims are not difficult. This is work which any no win, no fee lawyer will do for you without charge.

The Transport Select Committee has recommended that insurers should publish on their website a list of the firms with which they have referral arrangements, an indication of the level of fees paid and a clear explanation of how referral arrangements work and their purpose. They should make it clear that claimants need not use the recommended solicitor, vehicle repairer or credit hire firm .

As you read this someone is receiving a text from a claims management company encouraging a claim to be made.

This is a system which provides profit opportunities for vendors of fresh air at every stage. The Transport Select Committee has described it as “a dysfunctional merry –go-round”. The problem is currently being addressed in England under the “ Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Bill 2011”, which amongst other things outlaws referral fees. It remains to be seen whether this will cure the English patient.

So when you get your renewal premium don’t blame your fellow motorist, or at least those of us living in Scotland.

And has the time not come for concerted agitation for much more significant postcode discounts?

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This government seems determined to keep reviewing health and safety legislation until it gets the answer it wants

In October 2010, Lord Young’  

 

 

Britain’s ‘compensation culture’ is fuelled by media stories about individuals receiving large compensation payouts for personal injury claims…The problem of the compensation culture prevalent in society today is, however, one of perception rather than reality…(page 19). 

The Government welcomed the report.

 

In November 2011