Impartial Reporter

Take the right steps to help prevent injuries – and even death – from falls from height

-

FALLS from a height remains one of the biggest causes of fatalities and major injuries.

Many of these take place on farms where repairs to farm building are taking place. Common cases include falls from leading edges, roofs, from ladders and through fragile surfaces such as roof lights which have become brittle.

Short cuts are often taken when working at height, using buckets at the end of telehandle­rs to gain access, or just ladders, rather than safe and secure means.

The Health and Safety Executive for NI has issued advice reminding the constructi­on industry about the importance of using suitable access equipment, working platforms and edge protection when working at height.

Sadly, since 2020, falls have killed nine workers carrying out constructi­on work at height in Northern Ireland (NI).

It is essential, for those in control of work at height, to make sure work is properly planned, supervised and carried out by competent people with the skills, knowledge and experience to do the job.

If in doubt, seek advice from a competent health and safety profession­al as to how to carry the work out safely.

It is essential for clients, employers, self-builders, principal contractor­s and sub-contractor­s, and any person that controls the work of others (for example, facilities managers, or building owners who may contract others to work at height) to be fully up-todate with the requiremen­ts of the Work at Height Regulation­s (NI) 2005 and appropriat­e guidance.

Falls from height incidents can be prevented by:

• Recognisin­g the problem;

• Preparing a safe system of work and implementi­ng it; and

• Making sure the workforce are trained and supervised

Preparatio­n

WHEN planning work at height, it is essential to select the appropriat­e piece of work equipment and not just select from what the company has available.

You must make sure work is properly planned, supervised and carried out by competent people with the skills, knowledge and experience to do the job.

You must use the right type of equipment for working at height.

Take a sensible approach when considerin­g precaution­s. Low-risk, relatively straightfo­rward tasks will require less effort when it comes to planning, and there may be some low-risk situations where common sense tells you no particular precaution­s are necessary.

First, assess the risks. Factors to weigh up include the height of the task, the duration and frequency, and the condition of the surface being worked on.

Before working at height, work through these simple steps.

• Avoid work at height where it’s reasonably practicabl­e to do so.

• Where work at height cannot be easily avoided, prevent falls using either an existing place of work that is already safe or the right type of equipment.

• Minimise the distance and consequenc­es of a fall, by using the right type of equipment where the risk cannot be eliminated.

For each step, always consider measures that protect everyone at risk (collective protection) before measures that only protect the individual (personal protection).

Collective protection is equipment that does not require the person working at height to act for it to be effective.

Examples are external scaffoldin­g, permanent or temporary guardrails, scissor lifts/cherry pickers and tower scaffolds.

Personal protection is equipment that requires the individual to act for it to be effective.

An example is putting on a safety harness correctly and connecting it, with an energyabso­rbing lanyard, to a suitable anchor point.

DO...

• As much work as possible from the ground.

• Ensure workers can get safely to and from where they work at height.

• Ensure equipment is suitable, stable and strong enough for the job, maintained and checked regularly.

• Take precaution­s when working on or near fragile surfaces.

• Provide protection from falling objects.

• Consider emergency evacuation and rescue procedures.

DON’T...

• Overload ladders – consider the equipment or materials that workers are carrying before working at height. Check the pictogram or label on the ladder for informatio­n.

• Overreach on ladders or stepladder­s.

• Rest a ladder against weak upper surfaces, e.g. glazing, or plastic gutters.

• Use ladders or stepladder­s for strenuous or heavy tasks – only use them for light work of short duration (a maximum of 30 minutes at a time).

• Let anyone who is not competent (who doesn’t have the skills, knowledge and experience to do the job) work at height.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Take care when working at heights.
Take care when working at heights.
 ?? ?? Use the proper equipment to work at heights on farms.
Use the proper equipment to work at heights on farms.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom