COMPANY NEWS
TRAINING
Wenlock Health & Safety Ltd (WHS) is now holding our usual full complement of courses; however, due to the necessary Covid-19 restrictions, it is important to note the following:
- Maximum 6 delegates per course
- Lunch cannot be provided
- Full details, of both the precautions we have taken and what is expected from the candidates, are issued with the joining instructions for each course
Please be reassured that we have established strict measures within the building and training room to reduce risks. As they have been kept fully informed of these measures, CITB and the awarding body for first aid courses have given full consent for all courses to take place in person.
In return, we would ask the following. As we are so severely limited to the number of places for the foreseeable future, it is important for WHS to ensure full attendance. We therefore ask please that, once booked, courses or places are not cancelled.
In addition, if any organisation requires attendance at their own premises for 6 or more employees, a specific course can be arranged at a date and time to suit provided that suitable Covid-specific precautions can be agreed at the point of booking.
First Aid
Please note that all certificates expiring on or after 16 March 2020 will have their expiry dates extended until 30 September 2020 to give everyone a fair chance to attend a course.
WHS 1-day (6 hours) Emergency First-Aid at Work courses, run with very strict Covid-specific controls, are scheduled as follows; those who need to attain or renew first-aid certification are advised to book places as quickly as possible as, although we have included additional dates, demand will obviously be high.
Dates:
- 28 July 2020 FULLY BOOKED
- 27 August 2020 LIMITED PLACES AVAILABLE
- 24 September 2020
- 27 October 2020
- 25 November 2020
- 18 December 2020
Cost: £85 + VAT per person
As usual, please contact Vicki at Wenlock Health & Safety Ltd (WHS) on 01952 885885 or enquiries@wenlockhs.co.uk or vicki@wenlockhs.co.uk to book places
CITB Courses
IMPORTANT NOTES:
Please be aware that CITB specifies that candidates must be available to attend each session within the course; failure to do so may require a repeat course.
And attendance is vital, not only because it affects the candidate personally, but also because it can seriously affect others. As highlighted in the previous newsletter, because of CITB rules, we may be forced to cancel a course ON THAT MORNING if some candidates don’t turn up.
- Site Management Safety Training Scheme (SMSTS)
Duration: 5 days; 1 day per week
Dates:
- 31 July, 7, 14, 21 & 28 August 2020 (Fridays) ADDITIONAL COURSE
- 14, 21, 28 September, 5 & 12 October 2020 (Mondays)
- 13, 20, 27 November, 4 & 11 December 2020 (Fridays)
Cost: £495 + VAT per person
- Site Management Safety Training Scheme (SMSTS) Refresher
Duration: 2 days
Dates:
- 24 & 25 August 2020 (Monday & Tuesday) FULLY BOOKED
- 22 & 23 October 2020 (Thursday & Friday)
- 7 & 8 December 2020 (Monday & Tuesday)
Cost: £265 + VAT per person (10% discount when booking 2 or more people)
- Site Supervisors Safety Training Scheme (SSSTS)
Duration: 2 days
Dates:
- 7 & 8 September 2020 (Monday & Tuesday)
- 2 & 3 November 2020 (Monday & Tuesday)
Cost: £230 + VAT per person (10% discount when booking 2 or more people)
- Site Supervisors Safety Training Scheme (SSSTS) Refresher
Duration: 1 day
Dates:
- 25 September 2020 (Friday)
Cost: £160 + VAT per person (10% discount when booking 2 or more people)
- CITB 1-Day Health & Safety Awareness
Duration: 1 day
Dates:
- 17 September 2020 (Thursday)
- 16 November 2020 (Monday)
Cost: £125 + VAT per person (10% discount when booking 2 or more people)
IOSH Managing Safely
Duration: 3 days (Wednesday to Friday)
Dates:
- 7, 8 & 9 October 2020
Cost: £395 + VAT per person
INDUSTRY NEWS
Covid-19 / Coronavirus
No, the serious and life-threatening issue of Covid-19 has not gone away, and is unlikely to disappear worldwide in the foreseeable future. So the message is: we must ALL get used to the ‘new normal’ and carry on taking sensible precautions, even though the infection rate is diminishing.
‘Necessity is the mother of invention’, as they say. And we have certainly seen some very innovative and pro-active systems established on site to reduce the risk of contracting Covid to a minimum. For example:
- Bowmer & Kirkland have installed temperature sensors at entrances to turnstiles which are manned all day. If a person’s temperature reads above normal, he/she is asked to go back outside to cool down for a few minutes; if the reading is still high at the second check, the person is refused entry.
Others have set up stand-alone temperature check stations (an example of these was shown in the June newsletter)
Still more have linked them to doors and barriers to make sure entry is denied to anyone with an above-normal temperature
- Redrow has extended its induction to include an excellent video on its Covid systems
In general, WHS has found a good 85% of contractors doing their best to comply with both the Government and industry guidelines, and seeking advice when they are unsure. Most have put the relevant paperwork in place including the legally required documents being risk assessments). However, our consultants have found the following tendencies to be increasingly prevalent on many sites:
- Risk assessments are not site-specific, they tend to be generic. WHS has issued a short-form generic assessment, but this is only intended as a starting point. ALL risk assessments must, BY LAW, be site or operation-specific, and dealing with Covid is no exception. There has been ample guidance issued by WHS, HSE and the industry to help employers build on the generics, and WHS is here to help as always. But we repeat, anything short of specific is NOT adequate.
- Risk assessments are often ignored on site (which is often the case, regardless of the Covid issue!). WHS has found complacency from top to bottom within companies and site staff, coupled with a degree of scepticism of the risks. The age-old attitude still prevails on many sites: ‘well we have to work, don’t we?’ The answer to that is, yes we all do; but no work will be done by those who die from Covid.
- Deadlines are exacerbating this attitude as clients push for completions after several months of jobs being on hold. Remember, CDM states that time must be allowed to complete the job safely; this is a legal requirement for ALL circumstances, including during the Covid crisis. So challenge your clients if pressure is put on you to complete in unrealistic time-frames; Covid was unforeseen so clients must (legally) behave reasonably and responsibly by allowing adequate time for your work to be carried out without safety or health being compromised
- Lack of monitoring and enforcement of the rules e.g. distancing, frequent use of sanitiser, making sure doors and windows are open for ventilation, the wearing of face masks, etc, particularly with the control of sub-contractors.
- Social distancing not being enforced. The 1 metre distance can only be allowed when 2 metres isn’t possible, and then only if adequate alternative controls are implemented. The relaxing of the 2 metre rule was meant to be a pragmatic approach to impossible situations; it was NOT meant as a license to reduce controls.
- Face masks and coverings; refer also to the HSE section below. Whatever the current rules say, these are meant as minimum precautions and NOT total solutions. As we in construction have had drummed into us over many years, face masks save lives – so why treat the current Covid threat any differently? If anyone out there has experienced the total devastation caused to the body of a loved one by Covid, they would certainly not be questioning the use of masks.
- And another plea NOT to take any notice of the disinformation being posted on social media; this can only serve to harm us all by belittling the extreme seriousness of the virus.
FOOTNOTE
Just in case anyone reading this newsletter is still not convinced that Covid is or has been an issue at work:
On 11 May 2020, the very day that the Prime Minister stated that construction workers should be “actively encouraged to go to work”, the Office for National Statistics revealed that those very workers are more likely to die from the virus than ‘nursing assistants, care workers and ambulance drivers’. One industry campaigner even called this ‘social murder’.
WHS predicted that our industry would be hard hit from the beginning and we recommended lockdown of all sites – from a professional health & safety viewpoint totally unrelated to political persuasion. Our predictions have been proved to be horribly accurate. So, please, don’t listen to social media, don’t be misled by misinformation or bravado, but do listen to our professional advice. We have only the wellbeing of you and employees at heart.
Asbestos
The vast majority of contractors have done the right thing through the Covid pandemic; most have written risk assessments and trained their staff, at the very least via the induction process, into the dangers of the virus and necessary control systems – all for the well-being of their employees.
So why is it that we still don’t find the same level of effort and commitment in controlling the risks from asbestos? Covid is a pandemic that will eventually diminish, if not disappear completely. Asbestos is out there perennially and potentially kills up to 10,000 people a year in the UK alone; nothing short of an epidemic. Yet we still find employers of all types either paying lip-service to establishing controls or just ignoring the issue completely.
Wake up! Covid will pass; asbestos won’t for decades, if at all. You MUST train your employees and properly control the risks from asbestos as required by law. Contact WHS for advice and assistance.
Black Mould
Many old or unkempt buildings suffer from mould, generally due to damp (e.g. flooding or poor damp-proofing). All moulds have the capacity to harm, usually through the spores attacking the respiratory system, particularly those who are asthmatic or have respiratory issues. This is not uncommon (and suggests a possible cause for the so-called ‘sick building syndrome’ but does not detract from the necessity to ensure occupants’ (and others’) wellbeing by remedying the situation.
However, there are some moulds that can be extremely dangerous by producing mycotoxins, potentially causing serious damage to neurological systems and possibly death. There is also some suggestion that the mycotoxins can also cause cancers, but evidence for this is weak.
WHS will be issuing a full risk assessment in due course but, in the meantime, all clients designers and project managers should be aware that a full environmental (safety) survey will be required if there is any evidence of significant black mould, and possibly a specialist clean. And all project and site managers must alert senior management and/or the client should there be any sign of any mould. Most cases will be relatively harmless with a thorough clean and use of respiratory protection, but other cases may require a lot more; let the experts ascertain the degree of risk. Don’t take this issue lightly
HSE NEWS
Covid HSE news & guidance
The HSE has, over the months, built up a strong portfolio of information and guidance to assist businesses to control the risk of contracting Covid-19 whilst still being able to work. Some examples are as follows; these and many more can be found on www.hse.gov.uk:
- Covid Q&As: https://bit.ly/2DNMJIF
- Risk assessment: https://bit.ly/3h4UNTI
- General advice: https://bit.ly/2OpRiKW
- Social distancing: https://www.hse.gov.uk/coronavirus/social-distancing/index.htm
- Use of hand sanitiser and surface disinfectants: https://www.hse.gov.uk/coronavirus/hand-sanitiser/index.htm
There is also specific guidance, as the procedure can be potentially extremely dangerous, on the restarting of pressure system after being left dormant: https://bit.ly/3ewizWS
The HSE has also endorsed a great deal of industry-led guidance, such as:
Construction Leadership Council guidance (currently Version 4):
https://bit.ly/38VQbMI
Gov.uk:
https://www.gov.uk/coronavirus-business-reopening
https://bit.ly/3h2e08u (for construction)
https://bit.ly/390cml2 (for vehicles)
https://bit.ly/2DKSy9C (for offices)
Examples of best practice:
https://bit.ly/3eCDR5m
HSE Enforcement
As we have highlighted previously, and many of you will have heard through media, the HSE has been given additional funds with which to enforce Covid regulation in the workplace. A full press release was issued in early July drawing attention to the expectations of the HSE towards Covid-secure compliance, and the warning of enforcement for any transgressors:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2020/07/02/hse-urges-businesses-to-become-covid-secure/
Face Masks & Coverings
The HSE has stated that ‘face coverings…are not an effective way to manage the risks from Covid-19 and you should not rely on them’. HSE stresses that face coverings ‘are not classified as PPE’ for obvious reasons, and therefore the risk of infection should be controlled by social distancing, hand washing and other means.
The HSE has also stated that ‘surgical face masks….are not generally considered to be PPE in non-healthcare situations’ as they are designed to ‘limit the spread of infection’ only.
WHS agrees with all these comments. Nothing short of the full FFP3 and other risk-appropriate masks are considered PPE, and face-fit testing is mandatory for the use of these to ensure a tight seal and their effectiveness. In addition, a reminder that ANY PPE is considered a ‘last resort’ in the hierarchy of controls in the workplace. Therefore, surgical face masks and face coverings cannot ever be considered the only solution to controlling the risk of infection in the workplace. Additional Covid-specific controls must be established such as distancing, one-way systems, hand washing, placing sanitisers close to hand, etc.
However, in exactly the same way as use of FFP3 masks are advantageous even where engineering controls are in place (damping down, particle collection, etc), our professional recommendation is that, unless employees are working by themselves or at some distance (2+ metres) in the open air, it is still wise to further protect them by the use of masks.
One word of warning though, improvised face coverings can present risks in themselves; any excess material (e.g. scarves tied around the face) may well present snagging hazards. Managers must ensure that there is no improvisation and that any face masks are worn correctly.
Accident Statistics
The HSE has issued the accident statistics for 2019/20 which show a very encouraging downward trend with UK industry as a whole: 111 workers were killed – a reduction of 24.5% on 2018/19
Further more detailed will obviously be issued once full analysis has been completed.
However, provisional figures for the number of fatalities in construction show a disturbing and dangerous trend upwards: 40 workers were killed 2019/20 compared to 31 the previous year – an increase of 29% and full 36% of the total number of UK workplace fatalities.
To be honest, the industry should be ashamed of itself. After 25 years of CDM and 45 years of the Health & Safety at Work Act, what is it going to take to get the message across that construction workers deserve (and are owed by law) the same standards of safety as any other industry?
And the current emphasis on Covid-19 will not, and cannot be allowed to, detract from the need for exemplary safety standards on site; do NOT let your guard down. You have legal duties against which you can, and will, be prosecuted after a fatality; but more importantly, you have a moral duty to ensure your employees go home safely at night. We are here to help; allow us to help.
Health & Safety – the Financial Case
And, if you’re still thinking about money over people’s wellbeing, the HSE has put the case for the financial health of businesses being a sound reason for complying with health & safety law in its HSG245 document:
https://bit.ly/2WmtA74
The document clearly shows that, for every £1 spent on insurance by a business, it stands to lose between £8 and £36 in uninsured costs. Take a look at your insurance documents and do the maths – commitment to health & safety makes economic as well as moral sense!
Work at Height
The Construction Industry Advisory Committee (CONIAC) together with the Access Industry Forum have developed an excellent series of guidance documents to assist all parties involved with work at height to develop sound strategies. See https://bit.ly/2AZFr3d
Safety Steps has 5 parts, each written for a specific sector, and includes how to eliminate, plan, manage, monitor and train for work at height. Document/s relevant to you can be requested free of charge from:
- Designer https://bit.ly/2Ch4IGT
- Client https://bit.ly/3gZz3sa
- Manager https://bit.ly/391c5xS
- Supervisor https://bit.ly/2OucEa6
- Operative https://bit.ly/3epRqF2
GENERAL NEWS
Stress & Anxiety
Claims have been made that the rate of suicides has increased by 200% during the Covid lockdown compared to previous years. Whilst this claim is completely unsubstantiated, there is no doubt that stress and anxiety levels have risen in general because of a wide variety of factors affecting people’s personal lives, and we should all be sensitive to the needs of those around us who may be finding current conditions difficult to cope with.
However, as the threat of redundancy looms ever larger for a significant proportion of the population, there is quite likely to be a repeat of the additional stresses experienced when so many lost their jobs in the economic crash of 2008. We all have a part to play in helping support family, friends and work colleagues experiencing hardship and mental distress during this time. Keep a watch at work and at home for tell-tale signs and lend a hand before, not as a result of, things going too far.
And a plea to employers – if redundancies are eventually unavoidable, do it with care not belligerence. It doesn’t take much to tip someone over the edge in normal times; in current circumstances, it will be worse. Please do contact WHS for advice on both mental awareness and HR at the first sign it may be needed.
AND FINALLY
Obviously, the number of cases going through court has been minimal over recent months because of Covid-19 restrictions. However, that doesn’t mean that there are fewer prosecutions in the pipeline; it just means that the agony of going through the investigation and waiting for the court appearance is prolonged!! The following are a snapshot of recent cases:
(with thanks to the HSE for the photographs)
Work at height
- Modus Workspace Ltd was fined £1.1 million with costs of over £68,000 after a worker was seriously injured falling 3 metres from a ladder. He had been inspecting a sprinkler system when the ladder slipped from under him.
This may have appeared to be a quick job so why go the expense of providing appropriate access equipment? Because there is no justification at all for risking a man’s life and costing the company well over £1.1 million, no matter how quick the work, that’s why!
- Stan England Builders Ltd was fined £6,000 after a worker suffered serious injuries falling 2.5 metres from a platform to a first floor mezzanine.
So first floor level isn’t that high, is it? There’s no need to erect handrails to that platform, is there? Yes, there is a real need to erect fall protection in a situation like this, of course there is! That floor is hard and 2.5 metres is a long drop! Again, there is no justification for risking a man’s life and costing the company, what would have been to them, a significant fine, no matter what the height!
- Phoenix Roofing & Cladding Ltd was fined £20,000 after a self-employed roofer was seriously injured falling through a roof-light to the suspended ceiling below.
It can be seen from the photo just how flimsy and degraded the roof-light was; it should have been evident that, regardless of the legal requirement to do so, covering or barriers were required to prevent falls through.
STAY SAFE – STAY ALERT
FOLLOW THE RULES – DON’T IGNORE ADVICE
WHS is working for you; help us to help you.
Our aim is to keep people safe and to keep your company working.
To contact WHS, ring: 01952-885885