Post on 30-Dec-2015
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HEALTH & SAFETY ADVISER
John Friary
City extn 1109
North extn 2383
e-mail: j.friary@londonmet.ac.uk
http://www.londonmet.ac.uk/safety
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FIRE SAFETY ADVISER
Ian Jerome
City extn 3475
e-mail: i.jerome@londonmet.ac.uk
133 Whitechapel High Street.
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AIMS & OBJECTIVES (1)
• Update staff managers on statutory duties
• With respect to Fire Safety
• With respect to Health & Safety
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AIMS & OBJECTIVES (2)
• Explain the implications of new fire safety
regulations
• Explain how managers should fulfil their statutory duties
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HEALTH & SAFETY LEGAL FRAMEWORK
• 2 basis of Health & Safety Law:
1. Criminal Law – HASAWA 1974 and MOHAS
( Acts of Parliament and Regulations made under the Acts)
2. Common Law – Negligence
( Based on Case Law)
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HEALTH & SAFETY POLICY
• Statement of Intent• Organisations• Arrangements
• University H&S Policy• Department H&S Policy
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HEALTH & SAFETY CONSULTATION
• Health & Safety Forum (Sub Committee of BoG meets in Nov, Feb and May )
• Estates Health & Safety Group Meetings (meet monthly)
• Building User Groups ( meet bimonthly?)• Health & Safety Website
www.londonmet.ac.uk/safety• Message of the Day/Metropolitan
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ACCIDENT REPORTING , INVESTIGATION AND ANALYSIS
• Reporting – RIDDOR and University Forms(Accidents/Incidents/Aggression)
• Investigation – Part 2 of Form, carried out by Supervisor
• Causes - Slipping, tripping and falling, manual handling (most common early in Academic Year)
• Analysis – staff 10.2 per 1000 at risk (50.5 in UK HE Sector), students 1.1 per 1000 at risk (1.9 in UK HE Sector)
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WORKPLACE INSPECTIONS
• Regime of Annual/Biannual Inspection of University Buildings
• Thermal Comfort• Furniture and Equipment• PAT Testing• Risk Assessments• DSE Assessments
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HEALTH & SAFETY MANAGEMENT
• HSG65• Policy• Organising• Planning and Implementing• Measuring Performance• Reviewing Performance• Auditing
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HEALTH & SAFETY MANAGEMENT
• PLAN, DO, CHECK, ACT• Plan – establish standards based on legal
requirements and risk assessments• Do – implement plans to achieve objectives
and standards• Check – Measure progress with plans and
compliance with standards• Act – Review against objectives and
standards and take appropriate action
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RISK ASSESSMENTS
• DSE• Manual Handling• Fire• First Aid• All aspects of work on site and off-site• Underpins all of health and safety policies
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RISK ASSESSMENTS – 5 STEPS
• Look for the hazards• Decide who might be harmed and how• Evaluate the risks and decide whether the
existing precautions are adequate or whether more should be done
• Record your findings• Review your assessment and revise it if
necessary
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BACKGROUNDFIRE SAFETY LEGISLATION (1)
• Fire Precautions Act 1971
• Fire Precautions (Workplace) Regulations 1997
• Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
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BACKGROUNDFIRE SAFETY LEGISLATION (2)
Fire Precautions Act 1971:
• Fire certificates issued by the Fire Authority.
• Only applies to designated types of building use.
• Not educational establishments.
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BACKGROUNDFIRE SAFETY LEGISLATION (3)
Fire Precautions (Workplace) Regulations 1997:
• Applies to all workplaces (including LMU).
• Requires fire risk assessment to be done and recorded.
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BACKGROUNDFIRE SAFETYLEGISLATION (4)
Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005:
• Replaces FP Act 1971 and Workplace Regs.
• FP Act 1971 and Workplace Regs to be revoked.
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BACKGROUNDFIRE SAFETYLEGISLATION (5)
Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005:
• Applies to virtually all buildings except private dwellings
• Comes into force 31 October 2006
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
Key Points (1):
• Organisations have to appoint a “Responsible Person”
• The “Responsible Person” can delegate various tasks to “Competent Persons”.
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
Key Points (2):
• Fire risk assessments must be carried out.
• These must be recorded
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
Key Points (3):
• A written Fire Safety Policy must be in place.
• Contents of the Policy are prescribed in the Order
• Records must be kept
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
Fire Safety ArrangementsArticle 11. (1)
• “The responsible person must make and give effect to such arrangements as are appropriate, having regard to the size of his undertaking and the nature of its activities, for the effective planning, organisation, control, monitoring and review of the preventive and protective measures.”
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
• Responsible Person
• “In relation to a workplace, the employer, if the workplace is to any extent under his control
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
• Responsible Person
• “The person who has control of the premises (as occupier or otherwise) in connection with the carrying on by him of a trade, business or other undertaking (for profit or not)”
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
• Responsible Person
• “The owner, where the person in control of the premises does not have control in connection with the carrying on by that person of a trade, business or other undertaking.”
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
Competent Person
• “A person is to be regarded as competent for the purposes of paragraph …. where he has sufficient training and experience or knowledge and other qualities to enable him properly to implement the measures referred to in that paragraph”.
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
How does his affect you?
• Training
• At the time when first employed
• Repeated periodically where appropriate
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Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005
How does his affect you?
• Fire risk assessment
• Record keeping