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Health and safety
Health and safety legislation
The enforcement of health and safety is split between the Health
and Safety Executive (HSE) and local authorities.
The Health and Safety Executive covers factories, building
sites, mines and quarries, farms, fairgrounds, railways, chemical
plant and offshore and nuclear installations.
Local authorities cover shops,
warehouses, offices, hotels and catering, sports, leisure, consumer
services, eg. launderettes, hairdressers, undertakers, shoe repair,
tyre and exhaust fitters, residential care homes and
churches. In local authorities it is usually environmental
health officers (EHOs) who visit businesses in connection with
health and safety.
Health and safety activities
Primarily, environmental health officers seek to prevent
accidents and ill-health in the workplace. This is done
by:
- inspecting workplaces to make sure that risks from work are
properly managed
- helping people meet their legal responsibilities
- making recommendations of good practice
- investigating accidents or occupational ill-health
- investigating complaints about working conditions or work
practices
- acting as a source of advice on any aspect of health and
safety
- promoting awareness/knowledge of safety issues through
campaigns, newsletters, seminars or training courses.
Visits
This depends on why the visit is being
made and the type of workplace being visited. General
inspections are influenced by the extent of risk (to both
employees and the public) so that, as a rule, places with more
serious risks, or where the risks have been poorly controlled in
the past, will be visited more regularly. All accident
notifications are assessed by environmental health officers and may
result in an investigative visit, depending on a number of
factors including the severity of the injury, potential
for recurrence, extent of possible breaches of legislation, type of
accident and past record of the business.
Inspections are usually unannounced but, where necessary, can be
made by appointment. Environmental health officers will
probably want to talk to managers, supervisors, employees, health
and safety representatives and other interested persons. In
addition to looking around your premises, officers will examine
safety-related paperwork such as:
- health and safety policy statement (if applicable)
- risk assessments (if applicable)
- plant maintenance and inspection records
- training records
- accident records
Environmental health officers are under a legal obligation to
tell employees about issues affecting their health, safety or
welfare at their workplace. This may be done verbally at the
time of the officer's visit and possibly by sending a copy of any
correspondence to employees.
At the end of the visit you will be advised by the officer
what further action, if any, is going to be taken. If you are
going to be contacted in writing, you will be told when you
can expect to hear by. In any correspondence you will be
provided with useful and relevant advice on what you need to
do.
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