Paste text below
Text entered
HSE clampdown on unsafe construction sites in Ayrshire
Government Communications (NDS)
16 February 2011
During 2009/10, three workers died while working in construction across Scotland, two of them during refurbishment, repair and maintenance activities. There were 55 injuries on construction sites across Ayrshire in 2009/10. Starting on 21 February, Inspectors from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) will be making unannounced visits to refurbishment sites throughout Ayrshire. The focus of the HSE inspectors will be ensuring that sites are managing work at height safely and that they are in good order, as well as checking that the risk of exposure to asbestos is being properly managed.In a similar campaign last year inspectors visited 276 sites and 376 contractors across Scotland. They issued 82 enforcement notices across 77 sites, and were forced to issue 62 prohibition notices to stop dangerous work – much of it relating to working from height. HSE Principal Inspector Archie Mitchell said: “This will be the fifth year that we have run the inspection initiative across Britain and we anticipate that that there will be examples of both good and bad practice - those where employers are taking all the measures they can to protect their workers and those where safety is way down the list of priorities. “A lax attitude to health and safety in one of the more dangerous industries is not acceptable, especially when many of the incidents are completely avoidable by taking commonsense actions and precautions. As we’ve demonstrated in previous years, we will not hesitate to take action if we find poor practice that is putting the lives of workers at risk.“This year, as part of ensuring risks from asbestos are properly managed, we will also be checking that, where appropriate, asbestos surveys have been carried out prior to any refurbishment work. Many workers believe that, because asbestos has been banned as a building material, it’s no longer a threat to them. But that simply isn’t true. Any premises built or refurbished before 2000 could contain asbestos.”
Text entered is not saved. Save now
Save above text so that it can be shared and viewed side-by-side with news articles
- Robbery in Jesmond
- Cambridge Police - Armed robbery ...
- Weekly Round Up Of Road Works In ...
- James Dean Bradfield joins BBC ...
- Man assaulted in Wallsend
- Spending power outlook is tough ...
- Weekly summary of roadworks in ...
- Sainsbury’s becomes official ...
- BBC Director-General to assume ...
- UNC scientists collaborate to ...
| 5 news articles similar to text entered | Visualisation | Side-by-side | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| , |
cut |
pasted |
characters |
|||
Loading news articles
Text entered
HSE clampdown on unsafe construction sites in Ayrshire
Government Communications (NDS)
16th February 2011
During 2009/10, three workers died while working in construction across Scotland, two of them during refurbishment, repair and maintenance activities. There were 55 injuries on construction sites across Ayrshire in 2009/10. Starting on 21 February, Inspectors from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) will be making unannounced visits to refurbishment sites throughout Ayrshire. The focus of the HSE inspectors will be ensuring that sites are managing work at height safely and that they are in good order, as well as checking that the risk of exposure to asbestos is being properly managed.In a similar campaign last year inspectors visited 276 sites and 376 contractors across Scotland. They issued 82 enforcement notices across 77 sites, and were forced to issue 62 prohibition notices to stop dangerous work – much of it relating to working from height. HSE Principal Inspector Archie Mitchell said: “This will be the fifth year that we have run the inspection initiative across Britain and we anticipate that that there will be examples of both good and bad practice - those where employers are taking all the measures they can to protect their workers and those where safety is way down the list of priorities. “A lax attitude to health and safety in one of the more dangerous industries is not acceptable, especially when many of the incidents are completely avoidable by taking commonsense actions and precautions. As we’ve demonstrated in previous years, we will not hesitate to take action if we find poor practice that is putting the lives of workers at risk.“This year, as part of ensuring risks from asbestos are properly managed, we will also be checking that, where appropriate, asbestos surveys have been carried out prior to any refurbishment work. Many workers believe that, because asbestos has been banned as a building material, it’s no longer a threat to them. But that simply isn’t true. Any premises built or refurbished before 2000 could contain asbestos.”
Churn statistics
cut
pasted
characters overlap