Brooks Newmark MP: Keeping football safe.
Conservative MP Brooks Newmark
sets out the issues which have prompted his Goalpost Safety Bill, which is being
considered in the Commons.
Today I have the opportunity to bring forward a 10 minute rule bill calling for
mandatory safety standards for football goalposts by 2012. This Bill marks
another stage in the tireless campaign for safer goalposts fought by a
constituent of mine since her 11-year-old son was killed when a heavy and poorly
constructed goalpost fell on him in 1991.
Since this accident, another 10 children in the UK have been killed by falling
goalposts, along with many others worldwide. Even more have been injured, often
leaving permanent damage and disfiguring scars.
My Bill is not an example of 'health and safety gone mad', and I�m not talking
about professional football or about families having a kickabout in their
backyard. Instead, my Bill simply seeks to make the replacement of any goalposts
not adhering to the BSI standard mandatory by 2012, with its scope widened to
include goalposts used on property owned by councils, schools and clubs.
Significant progress has already been made in improving the safety standards of
football goalposts. We have an excellent BSI standard and the Football Authority
has distributed over one million leaflets to help clubs, schools and councils to
understand the risks posed by unsafe goalposts. The Football Foundation already
operates an excellent scheme whereby any FA-affiliated club, local authority,
school or community group can apply for a 50 per cent grant to replace any of
their goalposts which do not adhere to the recognised BSI standard. The
goalposts are then professionally installed and the applicant taught how to
maintain them correctly. With all of these measures, there is simply no excuse
for unsafe goalposts to still exist � yet they do.
The FA has identified around 15,000 goalposts which do not meet the BSI
standard. The Football Foundation has, to date, replaced around one third of
these unsafe goalposts at a cost of nearly �2m. This is an admirable
achievement, but there is more that can be done.
As a passionate football fan, a member of Parliament and a father of five, I do
not need to be told how important football is to young people. I know only too
well that millions of people regularly enjoy playing football and we need to
encourage them to continue to do so. However, we also need appropriate
legislation in place to keep them safe.
So 2012 is a realistic target, given the already operational BSI standard and
the Football Foundation's simple and accessible scheme. The year of the London
Olympics is also an important symbolic target: Proving that we have a commitment
to grassroots sports and that we care as much for safety as for success. That
would be a truly great British Olympic legacy
A mothers story: A Football Goalpost Killed My Son See here: (Chipmunkapublishing.co.uk )