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ARHM – Winter Seminar. 28 November 2013. Health and Safety Update and Dos and Don’ts. Esme Saynor and Rebecca Roffe – 28 November 2013. Overview. General Health and Safety Update The Health and Safety at Work Act Assessing the risk Working with contractors
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ARHM – Winter Seminar 28 November 2013
Health and Safety Update and Dos and Don’ts Esme Saynor and Rebecca Roffe – 28 November 2013
Overview • General Health and Safety Update • The Health and Safety at Work Act • Assessing the risk • Working with contractors • Health and Safety in Property Management • Safety of non-employees generally • Asbestos • Fire Safety • General news • Questions
Regulatory Context • Penalties for breaches of health and safety legislation are increasing steadily with the current record fine for a single offence being £15m imposed on Transco for breach of S.3 HSWA 1974. • Shell Plc was fined almost £1m following an accident, even though nobody was injured. • Even if prosecutions do not ensue, simply being investigated can cause a drop in an organisation’s morale. • Having a good health and safety record can help if something bad does happen.
Health and Safety at Work Act 1974– The Relevant Duties • Section 2: Employers duties to employees • Section 3: Employers duties to non-employees • Section 4: Duties to non-employees in respect of premises • Section 37: Offences by bodies corporate – ‘consent, connivance, neglect’
Embedding safety principles within a business • Set the right ‘tone at the top’ • HSE Guidance entitled ‘Leading Health and Safety at Work’ was originally published in 2007 in consultation with the institute of directors. • Sets three ‘essential principles’ that underpin good health and safety performance: • Strong and active leadership • Worker involvement and engagement • Assessment and review
Employer Responsibilities • s.2(1) “It shall be the duty of every employer to ensure, so far as it is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare at work of all his employees”. • s.3 “It shall be the duty of every employer to conduct his undertaking in such a way as to ensure, SFAIRP, that persons not in his employment who may be affected thereby are not exposed to risks to their health or safety”. • Contractors • Residents • Members of emergency services, neighbours, passers by and the public at large
What is risk? • “Risk is a different word from the word danger and it has a different meaning. It means, in the circumstances of this case, a possible source of danger”. • R v Board of Trustees of the Science Museum [1993] • The risk must be material, not fanciful or trivial • The Queen v Chargot Ltd [2007] • Whether a risk is material is down to the jury to decide • Tangerine Confectionary Ltd and Veolia ES (UK) Ltd v R [2011] • Imposes a duty on employers to think deliberately about things which are not obvious
What to assess? • The duty to assess risk extends to: • Risks to young persons (18 years or below) • New or expectant mothers (within 6 months of giving birth) • Lone workers or those working overseas • Disabled people • Inexperienced workers • Risk reviews relate to the extent and nature of the risks involved and the likelihood of creeping changes (as opposed to a major change which would automatically justify a review)
Risk Assessment – Dos and Don’ts • The Health and Safety Executive – HSE – provide 5 steps to effective risk assessment: • Identify hazards • Assess the risks • Who might be harmed and how? • Eliminate or reduce the risks • Are existing precautions adequate or should more be done? • SFAIRP • Document all findings and actions taken • Undertake ongoing evaluation • Review your assessment every year or if there are any changes to equipment, substances or procedures. Revise if necessary
Penalties for breach of HSWA • Health and Safety (Offences) Act 2008 increased penalties • Magistrates: £20,000 maximum fine • Crown Court: Unlimited fine • Some imprisonable offences • Disqualification orders • Costs orders
Employer Responsibility under the HSWA – General Dos and Don’ts • DO have effective health and safety management systems • Risk assessment, systems of work, written policies and procedures • Roles and responsibility defined and understood • Provide information and training for employees & contractors • Provide the right workplace facilities • DON’T forget to • Communicate the policies and procedures effectively • Review and update policies and procedures, monitoring and compliance • Keep records of training, compliance assessments and risk assessments • Review emergency procedures regularly
Individual Liability • s.37 Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 • “Where an offence committed by a body corporate is proved to have been committed: • with the consent or connivance of; or • as attributable to any neglect on the part of; • any director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body corporate, he as well as the body corporate shall be guilty of that offence”.
Scope of s.37 duty • What is connivance? • Doesn’t amount to actual consent to the offence but a failure to take any steps to prevent or discourage it i.e. ‘wilful blindness’. • What is consent? • Must have known the material facts which constituted the offence and agreed to its conduct (R v Chargot [2007]). • What is neglect? • Ask whether the accused failed to take steps to prevent an offence by the company and the taking of those steps fell within the scope of his duties. • Who is a manager? • A manager is someone who is responsible for deciding corporate strategy and policy. (R v Boal [1992])
Corporate manslaughter • Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007S.1 • “An organisation to which this section applies is guilty of an offence if the way in which its activities are managed or organised: • cause a persons death, and • amounts to a gross breach of a relevant duty of care it owed to the victim”.
Gross Breach • “A breach of a duty of care by an organisation is a gross breach if the conduct alleged amounting to a breach of that duty falls far below what can reasonably be expected of the organisation in the circumstances”. • Jury to decide by considering a list of factors
Factors for the jury to consider • The jury must take into account • Whether the organisation failed to comply with health and safety legislation • How serious that failure was • How much of a risk of death it posed • The jury may take into account • Any attitudes, policies, systems or accepted practices in the organisation that were likely to have encouraged a management failure or to have produced tolerance of it. • Any health and safety guidance that relates to the alleged breach • Training of employees, adequacy of equipment
Penalties • Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 • Unlimited fine • Publicity order • Remediation order • Compensation order • Prosecution costs order • Victim surcharge
R v Cotswold Geotechnical Holdings Ltd [2011] • First successful prosecution of a company under the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 • Concerned the death of a young, unsupervised employee • Company fined £385,000, the equivalent of 250% of its turnover • On dismissing an appeal against the fine, the judge said that it was unfortunate but ‘unavoidable and inevitable’ that the company would probably have to go into liquidation to pay the fine
Managing Contractors and Outsourcing • Need to satisfy self that contractors are competent, that they have sufficient skills and knowledge to do the job safely and without risks to health and safety. • Great importance in choosing a competent team and working safely and efficiently together. • The level of risk will depend on the nature of the job. • Whatever the risk, need to consider the health and safety implications of the job you want done. • This will involve: • Selecting someone suitable to do the job • Assessing the risks • Deciding what information, instruction and training is required • How co-operation and co-ordination between all parties is achieved • How the workforce is to be consulted • The level of management and supervision required
How can you manage the risk in contracting? DO Give credit in tenders for levels of risk management and ethical policies Consider having an overall policy to only contract with third parties who meet minimum standards Check for ISO accreditation or use of international regulations DON’T Use third parties who are not undertaking appropriate training
Control • s.4 Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 • Where a person has, by virtue of a contract or tenancy, an obligation of any extent in relation to maintenance or repair to premises or access, that person will have control. • Such persons must provide for the safety of non-employees who come into contact with the premises. • More than one person may have control over premises: Austin Rover Group Ltd v HM Inspector of Factories [1990] • Therefore it is important to identify who has control in the contract by identifying who has the repairing obligation. • Especially important in landlord-tenant relationships • A full FRI lease should put the repairing and maintenance obligations on to the tenant.
Asbestos • Under the general health and safety regime, employers and property owners have duties to protect people from exposure to asbestos fibres • There is also a specific legal duty to manage asbestos under the Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012, Regulation 4. • Which buildings are affected? • All non-domestic buildings whatever type of business. • The common areas of residential rented buildings • Regulation 4 imposes an obligation on the "dutyholder" to: • Determine whether asbestos is present in a building or is likely to be present by carrying out a risk assessment • Put in place action plans and systems to manage any asbestos that is or is likely to be present.
The “dutyholder” • What is the “dutyholder”? • You are a dutyholder if you own, occupy, manage, or have any contractual responsibilities for maintenance or repair of non-domestic premises • Even in the absence of agreement, all parties which control access or maintenance of a building could still be liable where it can be shown that asbestos has not been managed. • It may be that the primary responsibility for maintenance and repair rests with the tenant, but the freeholder will need to recognise that it may remain a dutyholder in certain circumstances: • e.g. Where a freeholder leases the whole of a property, the freeholder may retain some obligation to maintain or repair the structure/common parts • There can be multiple dutyholders in any given scenario, although one party is usually expected to be primarily liable
Fire safety • Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 • Applies to all non-domestic premises other than a restricted number of exceptions. • Includes vacant buildings • Includes external areas (car parks, loading bays etc.) • The ‘responsible person’ has the duties under the Order • Responsible person means • The employer, if the workplace is under his control • Otherwise the duties are extended to any person who has control of the premises • The owner, where the person in control of the premises does not have control in connection with the carrying on by that person of a trade, business or undertaking
Duties • To take general fire precautions to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable the safety of employees • In relation to non-employees, to take precautions that may reasonably be required in the circumstances of the case to ensure that the premises are safe • To carry out a risk assessment and keep this under review • Not only to keep fire exits clear and emergency lighting on!
Regulators' enforcement powers • Alterations notice • Served if the enforcing authority believes that the premises constitute a serious risk if a change is made to premises • Where a notice has been served the responsible person must notify the enforcement authority of the proposed changes to the premises and the fire risk assessment • Enforcement notice • Served if responsible person has not, in the opinion of the enforcing authority, complied with any provision of the order • Will require the responsible person to remedy the failure • Prohibition notice • Served if the enforcing authority holds the opinion that the use of the premises involves or will involve a risk so serious that the use of the premises ought to be prohibited or restricted
Offences • It is an offence for a responsible person to fail to comply: • With requirements, thereby placing one or more persons at risk of death or serious injury in case of fire • With any requirements of alteration, enforcement or prohibition notices • In relation to the provision of luminous tube signs (Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 art.37) • A person found guilty of one of these offences will be liable • On summary conviction to a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum; or • On conviction on indictment to a fine or to imprisonment for a maximum of 2 years
London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority v New Look Retailers Ltd (2010) • A fire broke out on the second floor of New Look’s Oxford Street store resulting in 400 people being evacuated. • The cause of the fire was unknown and there was no evidence that it was due to the negligence of New Look • However, the court imposed a fine of £250,000 for not having an adequate risk assessment and £150,000 for inadequate safety training (plus costs) • The case highlights the fact that there is now great scope for the courts to punish for a potential outcome of a fire
Health and Safety for Property Management – Dos and Don’ts • DO • Ensure risk assessments are conducted and reviewed by appropriately qualified members of staff • Put in place clear lines of reporting and monitoring of compliance • Ensure improvements required to the buildings to keep them legally-compliant are done in a timely fashion and adequate records are kept of all works • Review/update asbestos surveys where required and make these available to all contractors coming on-site • DON’T • Assume the tenant is always liable!
Recent updates • Review of Approved Codes of Practice • New guidance for leaders on “Managing for Health and Safety” • Fee for Intervention scheme
The reality of Solving Leaseholder's problems Michaela Mason and Paul Pinder – 28 November 2013
How a conveyancing transaction works • Pre-contract stage • Post-contract (or pre-completion stage) • Post completion stage
Pre-contract stage • Title • Searches • Buyer’s finances • Draft contract/lease
Exchange of ContractsPost Contract and Pre-Completion Stage • Draft lease • Buyer’s lender? • Preparation for completion • Mortgage?
Post Completion • Stamp Duty Land Tax • Registration at Land Registry
Post-Contract Stage • Draft lease • Buyer’s lender • Preparation for completion
Leases-The Main Elements • Premises and Rights • Rent • Service Charge • Insurance • Alterations • Alienation • Landlord’s Obligations
Premises and Rights • Flat Leases • House Leases
Rent andService Charge • Rent • Payment • Services • Calculation and Payment
Insurance • Buildings Insurance • Third Party Liability
Alterations and Alienation • Lease of part or whole? • General restrictions • - in last years of term • - consent required • - fees
Landlord’s Obligations • Insurance • Services • Repair of Estate and/or Building • Restrictions on Dealing • Other Leases
POZZO WOOD MCKELLENSHIRE DATE; 26/11/13 SCALE; 1:500 SITE & GROUND FLOOR BECKETT ROAD
POZZO WOOD MCKELLENSHIRE DATE; 26/11/13 SCALE; 1:500 FIRST FLOOR SECOND FLOOR