IJL
Well-Known Member
H&S may have lost the plot but its worth remembering that 1 person a week is fatally injured in the construction industry. I don't suppose that their families think H&S all nonsense.
Take the offence by the boatyard that the OP highlighted, a small tower such as http://www.scaffold-tower.co.uk/Miniscaff_Folding_Towers/
would have saved the day and for the use a boatyard would get from it the cost is negligable,
I don't think anybody is saying it is all nonsense. When I left university it was 100 fatals per year in construction so we must be doing something better. A couple of years ago I was giving evidence as an expert witness in a case where somebody fell down a lift shaft. I know there are real people involved.H&S may have lost the plot but its worth remembering that 1 person a week is fatally injured in the construction industry. I don't suppose that their families think H&S all nonsense.
I don't think anybody is saying it is all nonsense. When I left university it was 100 fatals per year in construction so we must be doing something better.
[...]
But you do see a lot of stupidity forced on the industry to comply with the letter of the regulations but which does nothing to improve safety.
The problem is that just about anybody can make a situation safer. The clever bit is knowing where to stop.
Then there is the PASMA training for each employee who will put the tower up, renewable every three years at £400 a person. The tower will have to be inspected for damage by a competent person, and possibly be scaff tagged on a weekly baisis which is a four day training course (call it £1000 pp), you will of course need a minimum of two employees trained, again renewable every three years. So yes the cost of the tower is negligable!
I learned (too late) about noise. The consultant hearing specialist assessed me as having very sensitive hearing. This she explained accounts for the difficulty I have with listening to, say a telephone conversation with a radio playing nearby. I hear everything.
She warned it was also a thing which would make me susceptible to hearing loss when exposed to loud noises.
She claimed she wore ear defenders to mow the lawn.
I recently visited a certain nuclear power station. It has an admin/office block, just like any other admin/office block. It's a two storey block. BUT you MUST hold on to the handrail when walking upstairs [a perfectly normal set of stairs]. My guide told me he'd been ticked off by someone earlier that day for not having his hand on the rail - he'd got a cup of coffee in one hand and a sandwich in the other, naughty man.