John Poole Posted June 2, 2017 Share Posted June 2, 2017 You'll find the diagram is a guide, and it's important to remember that should you be running a site of job, that you are responsible to manage, monitor and organise the site, job and therefore lifts. Bearing in mind that should you not do that, and subsequently injure a site operative they can bring action against you - always one eye open to being sued or HSE actions. Employing the worlds strongest man and telling him he cant lift a certain weight is stupid, therefore the diagram is a guide and any manual handling task should be assessed for weight, load type, person, environment etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeremy Harris Posted June 2, 2017 Share Posted June 2, 2017 Self-builders are not normally employers, they are clients or customers, so in general it's wrong to assume that the H&S@WA applies in the same way as it does to an employer. I managed a lot of our build, but at no time did I ever employ anyone, and at no time did I ever have any responsibilities under the H&S@WA. I did make sure that my responsibilities, where defined by contract with contractors, were fulfilled, but frankly these were minimal, and I probably went a bit OTT by providing facilities that I wasn't strictly required to provide. I've never, ever, heard of a single case where the HSE has even as much as looked at prosecuting a self-builder, which isn't surprising. The key here is to make sure that contractors are aware of their responsibilities, and that they understand that you, as a self-builder, are, by definition, not an employer. This is an important distinction, because important issues, like VAT regulations, mean that a self-builder cannot be a commercial entity, limited company, or any form of employer. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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