7 7
6HOME5ABOUT US43CONTACT US7 DAY TRIAL2ORDER CATALOGUE1E-LEARNING
News RSS Blog RSS

2SHOP ONLINE
 

13 Assessment Forms
13 Bespoke Production
13 Booklets
13 Clearance
13 DVD
13 E-Learning
13 Ergonomic Equipment
12 Fire Safety DVDs
11 First Aid Items
10 Interactive CD Roms
9 Manual Handling DVDs
8 Multi-Lingual DVDs
7 New Products
6 Posters & Safety Signs
5 Safety Equipment
4 Safety Monkey
3 SME E-Learning
2 Special Offers
1 Stand Alone Training CD Rom
5 Swine Flu Guidance
4 ToolBox Talks DVDs
3 Trainer Guides
2 Value Packs
1 Video on Demand

 
2

FEATURED PRODUCT
 



Manual Handling
NEW Edition
 

NEWS CATEGORIES
 
 ALL NEWS
 Asbestos
 Construction
 Corporate manslaughter
 COSHH
 Court Cases
 DSE
 Fire Safety
 Legislation
 Manual Handling
 Risk Assessment
 Slips, Trips and Falls
 Statistics
 Stress
 Working at Height
 

Content on this page requires a newer version of Adobe Flash Player.

Get Adobe Flash player

Equity fines for corporate accountability

August 26, 2008

Equity fines for corporate accountability
A politician suggests judges should tie fines for death and injury to company's share prices to increase corporate accountability, a source says.

Bill Wilson, a member of the Scottish National Party, made the proposals, the Herald reports.

Mr Wilson claims judges rarely fine large amounts for accidents in the workplace out of concern this will be passed on to employees through redundancies.

"They might possibly be punishing the very employees who were the innocent victims of the companies' offences in the first place," he explains to the newspaper.

He says that the fine for a death is less than £12,000 in half of cases.

Mr Wilson is launching a consultation for the issue that he hopes will result in equity fines to force a share issue, increasing corporate accountability.

This, he claims, will punish those profiting from a breach with a minimum risk of this being passed on to vulnerable employees.

Earlier this week, Sharaz Butt was jailed for the manslaughter of one of his employees.

His company, Alcon Construction, was given a nominal fine of £10 for the health and safety breaches that contributed to the death.ADNFCR-1336-ID-18748348-ADNFCR


More Corporate manslaughter news:

Corporate manslaughter understanding 'will come from case' - April 29, 2009
First corporate manslaughter charge issued - April 24, 2009
Firms 'can avoid corporate manslaughter' - March 24, 2009
Road accidents 'can cause corporate manslaughter cases' - February 4, 2009
Essex councils join HSE in 'myth busting' - October 15, 2008

CONTACT US SEARCH PERSONALISE FAQ PRIVACY POLICY TERMS & CONDITIONS DISCLAIMER