You don't submit it to the HSE
you wouldn't submit a health and safety plan to the HSE. F10 forms go to the HSE
I didn't think we needed it but the architect seemed to think it was important.
But I do wonder how long it will be before wily lawyers and smart workers start to put their made up injury claims in against homeowners - and their rich insurers. The first question will be "Where are the risk assessments and method statements?". Err what?
I admit I'm at a loss with regard to who I should be trying to insure as a DIYer that's doing a 200 man day project, 175 of which I'll be doing myself, or indeed whether anyone would sell me insurance given my lack of qualifications and lack of cscs status/card.
I suspect the problem here is that most accidents on construction sites occur on smaller domestic building projects, rather than the large sites.
HSE has simply dragged domestics into it in the hope of reducing accidents, but it does seem to be causing designers and builders lots of unnecessary problems.
If you do plans for - say - a loft conversion, how as the designer do you evaluate the problems of getting a steel beam in the roof without causing injury? Specify 10 men to lift it?; specify a crane?; have the beam cut into short sections and bolted together?
Chances are that in 99.9% of jobs, nothing goes wrong, so we tend to subconciously let these things slip into the background. But one day,
that 0.1% disaster job could crop up and HSE would have a field day establishing what the law is or isn't, at some poor sod's expense.
But I do wonder how long it will be before wily lawyers and smart workers start to put their made up injury claims in against homeowners - and their rich insurers.
If it's DIY work as opposed to managing a project at your home, then your nomal home insurance will cover you. You dont need qualifications to DIY.
For any firms or contractors coming in to work, then under CDM the area would be a site, and the contractor would have control of the site and any necessary insurance. There should be site diaries, signing in/out and all that malarky.
I'm building a small extension and will get a bricklayer in for 3 days on a day rate, what is my responsibility to him? Do I improve the situation by employing him on a fixed price basis rather than a day rate?
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