260 likes | 527 Views
Construction Health & Safety Awareness. Following the CITB/CSCS syllabus. HASAWA - EMPLOYEES DUTIES. SECTION 7 - To take reasonable care for the safety of themselves & others Co-operate with their employer SECTION 8 - Must not interfere with anything provided for health & safety
E N D
Construction Health & Safety Awareness Following the CITB/CSCS syllabus
HASAWA - EMPLOYEES DUTIES SECTION 7 - To take reasonable care for the safety of themselves & others Co-operate with their employer SECTION 8 - Must not interfere with anything provided for health & safety MHSW REGS 1999 Must comply with training/instruction Inform employer of shortcomings
LEGAL DEFINTIONS Must/Shall - an absolute duty, it must be done. There is no effective defence for not complying. John Summers vs Frost 1955 ‘..all dangerous parts of machinery must be securely fenced..’ Factories Act
‘SO FAR AS IS REASONABLY PRACTICABLE’ Reasonable practicable is a narrower term than physically possible and seems to me to suggest that a calculation be made in which the risk is placed on one side of a scale and the cost (in time, money or trouble) placed on the other side of the scale, it there is a gross disproportion between them, the risk being insignificant to the cost then the defendant has complied with his duty’ Lord Justice Askwith - Edwards vs National Coal Board 1949
‘SO FAR AS IS REASONABLY PRACTICABLE’ COST RISK
HASAWA SECTION 37 OFFENCES BY THE BODY CORPORATE ‘Where any offence has been committed with the consent, connivance or through the neglect of any director, manager or similar person, he as well as the body corporate will be guilty of an offence’
STATUTE LAW ACTS - the prime source of statute law. Costly, slow, full Parliamentary process and Royal Ascent REGULATIONS - subordinate to the ACT but have the full force of the law. Faster, enables law to be easily updated to keep up with technology or experience.
APPROVED CODES OF PRACTICE (ACOPS) Practical Guidance on how to comply with the law; issued by the HSE GUIDANCE NOTES Guidance notes Opinions of good practice.
POWERS OF HSE INSPECTORS Entry at any reasonable time Examine & Investigate Require an area to be left undisturbed Take samples,measurements & photo’s Look at records, documents etc Issue enforcement notices
Don’t forget, employees can also be fined or sent to prison!!
‘THE SIX PACK’ The Management of Health & Safety at Work Regs. 1999 The Health, Safety & Welfare at Work Regs 1992 The Manual Handling Operations Regs 1992 The Provision & Use of Work Equipment Regs 1998 The Personal Protective Equipment Regs 1992 The Health and Safety (Display Screen Equipment) Regs 1992
REPORTING DANGEROUS OCCURRENCES There are dangerous occurrences that must be reported to the HSE including: Contact with overhead electric cable Electrical short circuit with fire/explosion Collapse of scaffold Overturning of a forklift/crane etc Collapse of a structure (over 5 ton) Explosion or bursting of any closed vessel or pipeline Escape of a quantity of a substance that could cause damage to health or death
REPORTING DISEASES Employers are also responsible for reporting certain diseases to the HSE, including: Occupational asthma Occupational dermatitis Leptospirosis (Weils Disease) Hepatitis Nasal or sinus cancer Mesothelioma, Lung Cancer and Asbestosis Vibration White Finger (VWF)
FIRE TRIANGLE Fuel - liquid, solid, gas Heat - any heat source that rises the temperature over the flash point of the material Oxygen - always present in the air
FIRE PREVENTION To prevent or fight a fire you must break the fire triangle Housekeeping - tidiness - safe storage of substances Remove sources of ignition - no smoking - hot tools/soldering/blow lamps - electrical checks