(December 15, 2010 at 9:04 am)theVOID Wrote: Sure, we can do that, but it creates a double standard. The current overarching line is "all reasonable measures are to be taken to ensure the safety of all people on site at all times" or something to that effect. Reasonable is dictated by risk assessment vs project viability, some kind of opportunity cost. The only solution here would be to require that only mines have to comply with higher required risk aversion. As dangerous as mines are more people die on rail yards on average, so the double standard is unfair.
I believe that "reasonable" "risk assessment" "viability" are too fluid to use as a standard what are your scales measuring? You wouldn't have the same standards for a mine that one would have for a rail yard as both present different safety issues within different working environments. I'm not certain what measurement you are using. I would think that the end result would be that all steps be taken to ensure that regulations are in place to address the issues that lead to accidents or death. Which one environment can require more stringent regulation to achieve a safety goal than the other.
The world is a dangerous place to live - not because of the people who are evil but because of the people who don't do anything about it.
- Albert Einstein
- Albert Einstein