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RSA Environmental Health

RSA Environmental Health Ltd
Blotts Barn
Brooks Road
Northamptonshire
NN9 6NS
Tel: 01933 626444
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Health & Safety News


 

November 2008

 

bulletNew and changing legislation

bullet Planned changes to First-aid Regulations

Planned changes to First-aid Regulations Following extensive consultation, the Health and Safety Executive have announced that they plan to amend the training requirements under the Health and Safety (First-aid) Regulations 1981 with effect from October 2009.

The most significant difference is that the current four-day course and examination required to become a qualified first-aider will become a three-day course and examination. Requalification will still be required every three years and that will involve a minimum of 12 hours tuition followed by an examination, effectively a two-day course.

A second category of first-aider training is introduced, called Emergency First-aid at Work. This involves a one day course and examination every three years and is similar to the current (non-regulated) Appointed Person course. For both types of first-aider, a new requirement is that after the first and second year of a certificate’s validity, first-aiders will be expected to undergo a skills update course lasting a minimum of three hours. HSE plan to issue revised guidance to help employers decide which course is more suitable.

 

bullet Updated notification under CDM

The Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007, known as CDM, contain obligations to notify the Health and Safety Executive of certain projects, eg those lasting 30 days or more, or involving more than 500 ‘person days’ of work.

When the regulations first took effect, they carried forward the paper-based notification system that prevailed in the earlier (1994) version of the law. This is now amended to enable electronic notification as an option. Both the new e-form, and the paper version of F10 for those who prefer the traditional manual input method, can be accessed at https://www.hse.gov.uk/ forms/notification/index.htm

 

bullet New guidance on diesel engine exhaust emission

A second edition of Health and Safety Executive booklet HSG187 ‘Control of diesel engine exhaust emissions in the workplace’ has been published. There are two parts to the booklet: the first is about how to assess risk and introduce appropriate control measures; the second part is a selection of good working practices suitable for areas such as warehouses, garages etc.

The document is available from HSE Books ISBN 9780717663064 (tel: 01787 881165) at a cost of £8.95.


 

bulletEnforcement action

bullet Jailed for manslaughter

In August 2008, Norwich Crown Court ordered that Sharaz Butt, director of Alcon Construction Ltd, be sent to prison for 12 months after he pleaded guilty to a charge under s.37 of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. The case follows the death of an employee, Wu Zhu Weng, who fell four metres through a skylight in January and died as a result of his injuries.

The court heard that Butt had a flagrant disregard for workers’ safety and had not prepared a risk assessment or method statement for the work. There had been no training, and there was no safe way of accessing the workplace. It transpired that the dead man had also been illegally employed. This conviction demonstrates that legislation pre-dating the much-heralded Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 can be effectively used against rogue directors.

 

bullet Extended jail risk for drivers using mobiles

New guidelines have been published by the Sentencing Guidelines Council, which courts are obliged to follow, concerning the punishment for causing death by dangerous driving when using a mobile phone. The sentence can now be up to seven years imprisonment where the seriousness merits this, such as texting whilst driving. In addition, a prison term is advocated for drivers who cause deaths because they were briefly distracted by a mobile phone or some other avoidable activity, even though they may not have been engaged in a conversation.

 

bullet Ladder owner avoids liability for user’s fall

At the Court of Appeal, an employer has successfully challenged a Queen’s Bench judge’s ruling that he was partly to blame for an injury to a contractor who fell off a ladder found at his premises.The facts were that a contractor had been sent to service electrical equipment that was on the wall of a room owned by East Potential Ltd. He accessed the equipment by use of a ladder he found in the room. His own employer, Satelcom, claimed that the host employer was partly to blame because the ladder came within that employer’s control, and the original judgment agreed with this.

At appeal, however, the court said that in the absence of a finding that East Potential owned the ladder, it was hard to see what they could have done other than ensure it was not in anyone’s way. For the purposes of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998, they had control of the ladder only to the extent that they could have moved it or affixed a sign saying it was not to be used. Full liability for the injury was therefore passed to Satelcom Ltd and Intact Networks Limited and no blame attached to the host employer on this occasion.

 

bullet Fire safety contravention leads to large fine

Hendon Magistrates’ Court handed down fines and costs totalling £23,500 to retailer JJB Sports after a fire brigade inspection discovered six breaches of the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005. These included locked fire escapes, and escape routes obstructed by stock. Employees were found not to have had any fire prevention training. The company had already had a visit two years previously and had been ordered to improve, but clearly they did not take the necessary actions and this will have influenced the decision to prosecute and the severity of the penalty.


 

bulletIndustry news

bullet Asbestos awareness campaign

Asbestos awareness campaignThe Health and Safety Executive are spearheading a national campaign to raise awareness amongst tradesmen of the hidden dangers from asbestos. Starting on 13 October, there will be adverts in national newspapers, on national radio, and via leaflet distribution.

There will also be case studies in trade magazines. All of this is to make workers aware that they may be at greater risk than they think, and to offer advice on finding out more about asbestos and the necessary precautions.

 

bullet CoRGI’s bark to fall silent

The Council of Registered Gas Installers, CoRGI, has lost out in a bid to carry on running the registration scheme for those involved in gas installations and maintenance. The Health and Safety Executive has awarded the new contract to Capita, and it is due to start in April 2009.

 

bullet European Week of Safety & Health
European Week runs from 20-24 October, and the theme is the demystifying of risk assessments to show that they are necessary and worthwhile and not an overly-complicated process. Organisations will be encouraged to make informed decisions, and to concentrate on risks that cause real harm and suffering as opposed to trivial and everyday risks of little consequence. Further details, and free ‘action packs’ are available from HSE’s website at www.hse.gov.uk/campaigns/index.htm

 

bullet IOSH survey says workers approve of safety laws

According to the findings of a YouGov survey commissioned by the Institution of Occupational Safety and Health (IOSH), 65% of respondents said they believed that health and safety at work either saved people’s lives or helped to prevent ill-health and injury. Around 28% thought it was about red tape, unnecessary European laws, or preventing people from going about their daily lives. Nearly seven out of ten people said that compliance with workplace health and safety rules and regulations did not interfere with their ability to do the job.

In a separate survey also run by YouGov for IOSH, more than a quarter of employees said that they would report their employer to the enforcement authority if the organisation had broken safety laws.

 

bullet Fire safety of common areas in residential accommodation

A guidance booklet has been published by the Local Authorities Coordinators of Regulatory Services (LACORS) to try and explain how to improve fire safety in certain types of residential buildings in England. The guidance was necessary to avoid possible conflict and duplication of enforcement – there is a legislative overlap between the Housing Act 2004 and the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005.

The guidance affects, for example: single household properties, shared houses, sheltered accommodation in which personal care is not provided. It applies to these premises regardless of tenure (e.g private ownership, social housing and the private rented sector). Importantly, premises built or converted to standards in the Building Regulations 1991, and still meeting those standards, are not subject to the new guidance.

The 82-page booklet entitled “Housing – Fire Safety, Guidance on fire safety provisions for certain types of existing housing” costs £20 from LACORS (tel: 020 7665 3888).

 

bullet TUC says economic downturn may affect workers’ health

The Trades Union Congress (TUC) has warned that health, as well as ongoing employment, is likely to be put at risk in the current economic climate. With up to 3.3 million employees said to be concerned that they may not still have a job this time next year, attention has been drawn to the correlation between insecurity and higher rates of work-related accidents, sickness and heart disease. Employers should be vigilant and ensure that management strategies for minimising and recognising stress at work are sufficiently robust.


 

bulletPHSC Group news

bullet Sponsoring the stars of tomorrow

Sponsoring the stars of tomorrowThe logos of PHSC plc and its Group companies can be found on the No. 51 car of Stefan Wilson, a driver in the Formula 3 motor racing series. Stefan has won four races in 2008, including events in England, Belgium and Romania. In 2007 he was voted Young Driver of the Year, earning him a test in the McLaren F1 car more usually driven by Lewis Hamilton.

 

bullet Autumn training dates announced

A schedule of public training course has been announced by PHSC plc Group companies. Topics as diverse as working in confined spaces, food safety, asbestos awareness and noise at work can be studied at a number of venues this Autumn. Where a client wishes to send multiple delegates, it may be more cost-effective to run the training course in-house so please ask for prices. Details of the training courses can be found here (pdf, 73kb).

 

bullet Staff profile

Carol Hudson:
Carol Hudson is the Sales and Marketing Co-ordinator within the Temporary Staff section at RSA Environmental Health Ltd. Carol helps place professional environmental health staff into temporary positions, mostly within local authorities where they carry out enforcement work. This generally means she spends a great deal of time on the phone talking to clients and candidates and trying to find the right role for the right person. It’s very much like match-making and there’s nothing Carol finds more rewarding than helping someone to find a job.


 

bulletAnd finally ...

Conveying the wrong message…Conveying the wrong message…

Workers in the baggage handling section of Stockholm’s Arlanda Airport had a bit of a surprise on 26 August when an elderly woman came through the baggage chute for sorting.

It seems she mistook instructions at check-in, and thought that she was supposed to get to the plane by conveyor! The 78-year-old lady was en-route to Germany when she sat down on the on the unmanned belt and was promptly whisked off to the baggage handling centre. Staff helped get her back to the correct location and, uninjured, she made her flight as planned. There are no reports as to what became of her luggage!

 

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