mainsail1
Well-Known Member
Were there more accidents at your Club before risk assessment started?
Were there more accidents at your Club before risk assessment started?
If you want to over imbibe and fall into the oggin from the pontoon then fine, no amount of looking at the risks and mitigating them will stop you from doing that, but perhaps with a few ladders and the odd lifebelt around somebody just might be able to stop you from an early death.Which kinda proves my point that QHM asking for risk assessments from sailing clubs, is a bureaucratic waste of everyone's time.
People around when you fall off the pontoon will know what to do without a risk assessment......laugh, then help you back onto the pontoon. No doubt a risk assessment should lead to action including no alcohol being sold, no fun and no pontoon which in turn leads in the end to no sailing club.
Which kinda proves my point that QHM asking for risk assessments from sailing clubs, is a bureaucratic waste of everyone's time.
People around when you fall off the pontoon will know what to do without a risk assessment......laugh, then help you back onto the pontoon. No doubt a risk assessment should lead to action including no alcohol being sold, no fun and no pontoon which in turn leads in the end to no sailing club.
Does HASAWA apply to a club with no employees? It is not a workplace.
Were there more accidents at your Club before risk assessment started?
If you study HASWA 74 Mr Mainsail, don't skip the Preamble - as many folk do. There it will tell you to interpret the Act with 'reasonableness'. There is no need for hysteria or to close Clubs down.
There is a way of avoiding HASWA 74 of course.... That is for the Club to say eg. This w/e we will rendezvous at this venue. Offer no tide/navigation advice, no safety boat, no weather forecast. Each skipper will be responsible for his/her own boat and crew.
I seem to remember the RYA lawyers suggesting this may not be a satisfactory defense though as far as I know it has not been tested in court.
Odd how HASAWA applies to some, but not to others... particularly the highways authorities.
Their standard is to do nothing until 8 serious accidents occur at a location over six years. Indeed there has been a fatality and two further serious accidents near me during the last 9 years. Nothing done about the management of the road. Who else could get away with that? ... but I digress.
I would like to see that RYA's lawyers advice Mr Maxi. Can you link me to it plz?
Which kinda proves my point that QHM asking for risk assessments from sailing clubs, is a bureaucratic waste of everyone's time.
People around when you fall off the pontoon will know what to do without a risk assessment......laugh, then help you back onto the pontoon. No doubt a risk assessment should lead to action including no alcohol being sold, no fun and no pontoon which in turn leads in the end to no sailing club.
I have used a matrix of consequence and likelihood... one to five.
Thus event is guaranteed to happen, 5. Event will result in fatality or debilitating injury, 5. Score 25.
Event will happen 5, Event will cause no harm 1. score 5.
Kettles were banned by H & S in my wife's head office in London … I wonder if QHM Pompey has got a kettle on the premises. Dangerous things kettles!
That’s a sign on an incompetent H & S Manager banning something that is in general use in millions of locations with all users likely to be very familiar with how to use