2. Health and Safety
Responsibilities
When it comes to health and safety in construction every person
associated with the site and company has a responsibility.
Health and safety is relevant to all businesses. So, if you are an
employer – or are self employed – you are responsible for the health,
safety and welfare of employees and any others who may be affected
by what you do. This includes employees, casual or part time workers,
trainees, customers, neighbours, sales people and members of the
public.
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3. Health and Safety
Employer’s Responsibility
Employers have a responsibility to:
provide information, instruction and training for employees
provide adequate supervision and safe systems of work and safe means of
access and egress
provide and maintain machinery and equipment
provide safe handling, use and storage of materials and substances
provide necessary personal protective clothing and equipment
provide risk assessments …
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4. Health and Safety
Employer’s Responsibility
produce a written safety policy (when an employer has five employees or
more)
provide adequate welfare facilities
consult with employees over health and safety
have in place adequate measures for emergencies including fire
provide first aid
record and report accidents, diseases and dangerous occurrences
protect employees from noise which may cause hearing loss.
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5. Health and Safety
Employee’s Responsibility
Employees have a responsibility to follow the training and instruction given, and
in particular to:
• keep the workplace clean and tidy
• wear the correct clothing
• report any accidents or hazardous situations
• always use the correct and safe way of doing something
• observe any safety signs or notices
• co-operate with their employer
• not do anything that they feel is too dangerous or might harm them or others
• ask if unsure of anything.
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6. Health and Safety
Reasonably practicable
One phrase often comes up here – ‘so far as is reasonably practicable’.
This means that health and safety must be adhered to at all times, but
must take a common sense, practical approach.
For example, the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 states that an
employer must so far as is reasonably practicable ensure that a safe place
of work is provided. Yet employers are not expected to do everything they
can to protect their staff from lightning strikes, as there is only a 1 in
800,000 chance of this occurring – this would not be reasonable!
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7. Health and Safety
Health and Safety Executiv
The Health and Safety Police
The Health and Safety Executive or HSE as it is more commonly known as
is a Government funded organisation set up to oversee and ensure health
and safety legislation is complied with in all workplaces.
The HSE employs inspectors to visit workplaces.
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8. Health and Safety
Health and Safety Executive
The role of Inspectors from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) or the
Local Authority includes:
• administering health and safety law
• overseeing and controlling health, safety and welfare
• visiting workplaces to check that people are complying with the rules
• helping you to understand what you need to do to comply with
legislation by giving advice
• enforcing the law only when something is seriously wrong.
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9. Health and Safety
Health and Safety Executive
Powers and duties of inspectors include:
entering premises to examine and investigate
seizing evidence
measuring, recording, etc
questioning staff
serving notices, for example, improvement (remedy), prohibition (stop work)
avoiding imminent danger – to seize and destroy
prosecuting for offences.
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10. Health and Safety
Health and Safety Executive
HSE must be informed of the following:
Start of any building work lasting more than six weeks
Employment of workers for more than 21 hours per week
Employment or transfer of young people (under 18)
Accidents resulting in death or major injury
Poisoning or suffocation incidents resulting in medication
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11. Health and Safety
Further Information Sources
• The Health and Safety Executive
www.hse.gov.uk
• The Royal Society for the Prevention of Accidents
www.rospa.com
• Health and Safety Commission
www.hse.gov.uk
• The Royal Society for Public Health
www.rsph.org.uk
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