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The presentation is from Mark Sutton For SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd

The presentation is from Mark Sutton For SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd. A Free Resource From www.safetyphoto.co.uk. Working at Height How to comply with the new Regulations. Mark Sutton For SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd. Why introduce these New Regulations?.

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The presentation is from Mark Sutton For SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd

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  1. The presentation is from Mark SuttonFor SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd A Free Resource From www.safetyphoto.co.uk

  2. Working at HeightHow to comply with the new Regulations Mark Sutton For SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd

  3. Why introduce these New Regulations? • Biggest Killer 67 Fatal Accidents 2003/04 • 3884 Major Accidents 2003/04 • The single biggest cause of Workplace Deaths • One of the biggest causes of major accidents • 2/3 of all major injuries caused by ‘low falls’

  4. Why are these rules important? • These regulations have been made to prevent the Deaths and Injuries caused each year by falls at work • They REPLACE all the earlier regulations about working at height and implement European Council Directive 2001/45/EC concerning safety and health for use of equipment for work at height (the Temporary Work at Height Directive).

  5. What is Work at Height?Regulation 2 • Explains for the purposes of the Regulations, certain words and phrases that will crop up throughout the document which unless defined could be interpreted differently from one industry to another. • Work at Height Work in any place, including a place in: • the course of obtaining access to or egress from any place except by a staircase in a permanent workplace or; • At or below ground level from which a person could fall a distance liable to cause personal injury and any reference to working at height will include access to or egress from such places whilst at work.

  6. Working at height • Working on a scaffold or MEWP • Working on the back of a lorry • Using cradles or ropes to gain access • Climbing permanent structures such as gantries • Working close to excavations, cellars or other openings. • Staging or trestles (concerts filming etc) Not working at height • Activities carried out by private individuals (even if the equipment used is from work). Trips and slips on the level surface • Falls on permanent stairways (unless under structural maintenance) • Working in a building (e.g. office) with multiple floors where there is no risk of falling (except if the staff use a stepladder to change the bulbs within the office)

  7. “Access and egress” • “Working Platform” • Includes ascent and descent • Any platform used as a place of work, or as a means of access to or egress from a place of work. • Any scaffold, suspended scaffold, cradle, mobile platform, trestle, gangway, gantry or stairway which is so used • But does not include a building or other • permanent structure

  8. “Work equipment” • “Ladder” • “Line” • Any machinery, appliance, apparatus, tool or installation for use at work and includes anything to which Regulation 8 and schedules 2 to 6 of the WAHR apply. • Includes a fixed ladder and a step ladder • Includes rope, chain or webbing

  9. “Competence” • “Personal fall protection” • “Fragile surface” • Every employer shall ensure that no person engages in activity, including organisation, planning or supervision, in relation to work at height or work equipment for use in such work unless he is competent to do so or, if being trained, is being supervised by a competent person • A fall prevention, work restraint, work positioning, fall arrest or rescue system other than a system in which the only safeguards are collective safeguards or: • Rope access and positioning techniques. (terminology adopted from BS 7985:2002 Code of Practice for the use of rope access methods for industrial purposes) • A surface which would be liable to fail if any reasonably foreseeable loading were to be applied to it

  10. What do the Schedules to the regulations cover? • Schedule 1 • Existing places of work and means of access for work at height • Schedule 2 • Collective fall prevention (e.g. guard rails and toe boards) • Schedule 3 • Working platforms • Schedule 4 • Collective fall arrest (e.g. nets, airbags etc) • Schedule 5 • Personal fall protection • Schedule 6 • Ladders and step ladders • Schedule 7 • Inspection reports • Schedule 8 • Revocations (cancellations, dissolution)

  11. Do the Rules apply to you? • The Regulations apply to all work at height where there is a risk of a fall liable to cause personal injury. They place duties on employers, the self-employed, and any person who controls the work of others. • If you are an employee or working under someone else's control, regulation 14 says you must: • Report any safety hazard to them. • Use the equipment supplied (including safety devices) properly, following any training and instructions (unless you think that would be unsafe, in which case you should seek further instructions before continuing).

  12. What you must do if you as an Employer • Duty holders must: • Avoid work at height where they can • Use work equipment or other measures to prevent falls where they cannot avoid working at height; and • Where they cannot eliminate the risk of a fall, use work equipment or other measures to minimise the distance and consequences of a fall should one occur

  13. Duty Holders Responsibilities • The regulations require • All work at height is properly planned & organised • All work at height takes account of weather conditions that could endanger health & safety • Those involved in work at height are trained and competent • The place where work at height is done is safe • Equipment for work at height is appropriately inspected and controlled • The risks from fragile surfaces are properly controlled; and • The risk from falling objects are properly controlled. • Just remember a risk assessment is to be written to control the hazards.

  14. Do the Work at Height Regulations ban the use of Ladders? • Short answer for that is NO! • But they require that ladders should only be considered where a risk assessment has shown that the use of other more suitable work equipment is not appropriate because of the low risk, and short duration of the task or consideration of where the work is located

  15. A few Correct ways of Working at Height

  16. Why is this correct?

  17. Again

  18. A piece of Equipment that can be used

  19. Bosun`s Chair

  20. Any Questions? • If you are unsure about anything now, it will be far to late to come and ask me when you are 30ft up or 30ft below the surface and you don't have a Harness • Remember There is no such thing as a “stupid” or “daft” Health and Safety Question!

  21. The presentation is from Mark SuttonFor SAFEHANDS Health & Safety Consultants Ltd A Free Resource From www.safetyphoto.co.uk

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