Regulations
The CDM Regulations
are about management of health and safety and generally apply to (i) construction
work, which is notifiable i.e. lasts for more than 30 days, and (ii) non-notifiable
work involving five or more people on site at any one time. Anyone who
appoints a designer or contractor has to ensure that they are competent
for the work and will allocate adequate resources for health and safety.
Working together as a team, there are five key parties who have specific
duties.
(1)
As the Client, you should be satisfied that only competent people are
appointed as Planning Supervisor, Principal Contractor, Designers, and
Contractors and ensure, as much as they can, that sufficient time and
resources have or will be allocated to enable the project to be carried
out safely.
(2) As much as they can,
Intelligent Work Space Ltd will:-
a. As the Designer,
ensure that structures are designed to avoid, or where this is not possible
to minimise, risks to health and safety while they are being built and
maintained. In cases where risks cannot be avoided, adequate information
will be provided. Design includes the preparation of specifications as
well as drawings.
b. As the Planning
Supervisor, co-ordinate the health and safety aspects of the design and
planning phase, and the early stages of the Health
and Safety Plan (4) and the Health and Safety
File (6)
.
c. As Principal
Contractor, take account of health and safety issues when preparing and
presenting tenders for similar documents; develop the Health
and Safety Plan (5) and co-ordinate the activities of all contractors
to ensure they comply with health and safety legislation. Check on the
provision of information and training for employees, and the self-employed
on health and safety.
(3) Contractors and the
self-employed: should co-operate with Intelligent Work Space Ltd and provide
relevant information on the health and safety risks created by their work
and how they will be controlled, together with providing other information
to Intelligent Work Space Ltd and employees. The self-employed have duties
similar to contractors.
(4) The
Pre-Tender Health and Safety Plan: which Intelligent Work Space Ltd has
to ensure is prepared, should include:
· A general description of work.
· Details of timings within the project.
· Details of risks to workers as far as possible at that stage.
· Information required by potential principal contractors to demonstrate
competence or adequacy of resources.
· Information for preparing a health and safety plan for the construction
phase and information for welfare provision.
(5)
The Health and Safety Plan for the Construction Phase: Developed by Intelligent
Work Space Ltd, this is the foundation on which health and safety management
of construction work is based. It should include:
· Arrangements for ensuring the health and safety of all who may
be affected by the construction work.
· Arrangements for the management of health and safety of construction
work and monitoring of compliance with health and safety law.
· Information about welfare arrangements.
(6)
The Health and Safety File is a record of information for the client who
tells them, and those who might be responsible for the structure in future,
of the risks that have to be managed during maintenance, repair or renovation.
Intelligent Work Space Ltd has to ensure that the file is prepared as
the project progresses and will hand it over to the client when the project
is complete. The client has to make it available to those who will work
on future design, building, maintenance, or demolition of the structure.
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