News - October 2022- Legal Update
News: HSE – Silica dust
Silica dust. From 1 October HSE inspectors will be out and about visiting manufacturing businesses using stone or working with tiles and bricks. The purpose is to check control measures to protect workers’ respiratory health.
Further information:
Health surveillance for those working with silica dust. This information sheet explains what to expect from a health surveillance provider investigating potential silicosis and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Further information:
https://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/guidance/g404.pdf
News: HSE – Manual Handling
Manual handling in construction. HSE inspectors will be carrying out inspections in October and November checking how workers are moving heavy or bulky materials. Inspectors hope to reduce the 40,000 muscular-skeletal injuries which happen every year in the UK construction industry.
Further information:
News: General Product Safety
Summary of product safety law. This House of Commons Library briefing paper provides an overview of the current product safety regime in the UK.
Further information:
https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-8211/
News: Care Homes
Using oxygen within care homes. This guidance document from the British Compressed Gases Association (BCGA) sets out the industry expectations for the control of medicinal oxygen within care homes.
Further information:
https://bcga.co.uk/publications/gn46-medical-gases-safe-management-of-oxygen-in-care-homes/
News: Fire
Safety alert; Defective fire dampers. The Building Engineering Services Association (BESA) is concerned at reports of a huge number of fire dampers being incorrectly installed, meaning that they’ll malfunction in the event of fire leading to more rapid spread of fire. Fire dampers are an essential element found within larger structures and are fitted to ductwork to prevent fire from spreading through the system. Organisations and businesses who think they could be affected should have their dampers inspected by a competent engineer.
Further information:
Fire hazard from E-bike chargers. The charity, Electrical Safety First, says that dangerous e-bike chargers are widely available via online sales platforms. The fire dangers from e-bike chargers has already been highlighted by London Fire Brigade, therefore businesses should think carefully about e-bike charging facilities so that escape routes in buildings are not compromised.
Further information:
News: Mental Health
Half of UK workers have poor mental health. A study shows that almost half the UK workforce has poor mental health, partly as a result of worsening mental health during the pandemic.
Further information:
Case law
6 metre fall through fragile roof. A court has heard how an employee was sent onto a roof to install bird deterrent spikes, following which he fell through a fragile roof. No risk assessment or safe system of work had been prepared to control the work.
Further information:
Lost little finger. A manufacturer has appeared in court over an accident in which an employee lost her little finger. It was normal practice to test run motors at the end of the production line. But there was no guarding or safe system of work.
Further information:
Hand-arm vibration
Two partners in a construction firm have been personally fined after an employee suffered hand-arm vibration syndrome. There was no assessment of risk and no health surveillance programme.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/09/22/firm-failed-to-control-risks-to-employees-from-vibration/
Run down whilst clearing manholes. A site manager and a plant hire manager have been prosecuted along with two companies in connection with the death of a worker. The 18-year-old construction worker who died, had been clearing manholes on a roadway when he was crushed by a moving vehicle.
Further information:
Hand severed in machine. A company has been fined £115,000 after an employee’s hand was severed during maintenance work, leading it to be reattached but leaving the man with a long-term disability. The cause of the accident was allowing work to take place in an enclosure whilst machines were live and a lack of safe procedures.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/09/20/firm-fined-115000-after-workers-hand-was-cut-off-in-machine/
Killed in roof fall. A roofing contractor has been given a suspended prison sentence after a roofer was killed. The root cause of the accident was that there was no safe means of transporting materials to and from the roof, resulting in slates being carried by hand whilst climbing and descending ladders.
Further information:
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