New publications this month:
HEALTH AND SAFETY EXECUTIVE (HSE)
Keeping workplaces safe as coronavirus (COVID-19) restrictions are eased – sources of advice
Guidance has been published reflecting the relaxation of COVID-19 restrictions.
Talking with your workers about preventing coronavirus (COVID-19)
This guidance has been updated.
Biocide Article 95 Suppliers – approaching deadline
The HSE has published an eBulletin on biocides. This reflects that to remain on the GB Article 95 list of biocides after 31 December 2022, companies must:
Suppliers can complete both actions at the same time or independently, however both actions must be completed by 31 December 2022. The full original EU application must be submitted, alongside any data gathered or generated since the original submission.
Biocides: Applications for product authorisation and active substance approval
This eBulletin concerns the Biocidal Products regime in Great Britain. Applications for GB product authorisation (including renewals) and active substance approval (including renewals) need to be resubmitted to HSE by the deadlines stated.
Submitting chemicals information to the National Poisons Information Service
This eBulletin provides guidance on how chemical companies should submit information to the National Poisons Information Service under the retained Classification, Labelling and Packaging (CLP) Regulation. Different arrangements apply in Great Britain and Northern Ireland, due to the Northern Ireland protocol.
SCOTTISH GOVERNMENT
Practical fire safety - existing high rise domestic buildings: guidance
Guidance on the management of fire safety in existing high risk domestic buildings was updated during March 2021.
HEALTH AND SAFETY EXECUTIVE NORTHERN IRELAND (HSENI)
Enforcement guidelines for health and safety at work in Northern Ireland
This guidance sets out general principles and the approach to be taken when the HSENI undertakes enforcement decisions.
Construction companies fined following failure of working platform
Two companies have been sentenced following an incident were a working platform failed and a worker using the platform was injured.
On 1 July 2019, Dere Street Homes Limited was acting as principal contractor. The company had provided components for a proprietary polypropylene working platform at a new build in Wheatley Hill, County Durham. SGS Construction & Design Limited were acting as a contractor and supplied workers to erect the working platform.
The working platform failed and a bricklayer using the platform was injured.
An HSE investigation found that a number of components were missing from the working platform. Although workers previously supplied by SGS were formally trained in the erection of the components to form a safe working platform, the worker who erected the failed platform had not received adequate training.
The working platform had earlier been signed off by a site manager working for Dere Street Homes. When this manager left, a number of months prior to the incident, the inspection and signing off of the working platform was no longer undertaken.
Breaches
Dere Street Homes Limited pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 13(1) of the Construction (Design & Management) Regulations 2015.
SGS Construction & Design Limited pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 15(2) of the Construction (Design & Management) Regulations 2015.
Penalties
Dere Street Homes Limited was fined £38,000 and ordered to pay costs of £5,367.30.
SGS Construction & Design Limited was fined £8,000 and ordered to pay costs of £2,683.60.
Garage fined after mechanic suffers life-changing injuries in a fall
A garage has been fined after an employee suffered life changing injuries when he fell into a vehicle inspection pit.
On 3 September 2018, an employee of GP Motors Works Ltd on the Isle of Wight fell into a vehicle inspection pit more than five feet deep whilst carrying out mechanical repairs to a nearby vehicle.
The vehicle inspection pit was partially covered with a small vehicle, leaving around seven feet of the pit uncovered and without any other measures to prevent exposing employees to an unnecessary fall risk. The employee sustained serious head and shoulder injuries, which required surgery.
An HSE investigation found the company had failed to ensure the pit had any physical measures, such as barriers or pit covers, in place to prevent a person falling into it.
Breach
GP Motor Works Ltd pleaded guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974.
Penalty
GP Motor Works Ltd was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay costs of £10,000.
Fines after Shropshire foundry was found to have exposed workers to hand-arm vibration risks
Saint-Gobain Construction Products UK Limited, who operate a large foundry in Telford, has been fined after a number of its workers were diagnosed with hand arm vibration syndrome (HAVS).
Newcastle-under-Lyme Magistrates’ Court heard how three employees, the earliest of which had used vibrating tools at the company since 1989, had developed and were subsequently diagnosed with HAVS in 2016.
Despite the diagnosis, one of the workers continued working with vibrating tools without effective control measure. The employees used tools such as hand grinders, air chisels, spindle grinders, and earlier in their employment, jackhammers, to finish cast iron drainage products.
An HSE investigation found that until 19 December 2017, the company’s vibration risk assessment did not identify each employee’s daily exposure to vibration and did not measure cumulative exposures of using different vibrating tools throughout a shift.
The HSE investigation also found there was inadequate health surveillance in place and employees were not made aware of HAVS and its symptoms. Despite health surveillance notifying the company of a HAVS diagnosis, the company had failed to take effective action to adjust the affected worker’s job, meaning that staff continued to be exposed to excessive vibration.
Saint-Gobain Construction Products UK Limited pleaded guilty to failing to discharge the duties imposed upon it by Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974.
Saint-Gobain Construction Products UK Limited was fined £500,000 and ordered to pay costs of £9,453.