What to expect from a health and safety visit
What to expect from a health and safety inspector, and the implications of improvement or prohibition notices.
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What to expect from a health and safety inspector, and the implications of improvement or prohibition notices.
Advising staff on how to ensure there is adequate ventilation in vehicles used for work purposes.
How you can use mechanical ventilation such as air conditioning to improve the supply of fresh air in the workplace.
How to assess that there is an adequate supply of fresh air in any workspace.
Ways of reducing storage risks - from clearing exit routes and checking shelving to clearing up spillages quickly and providing any appropriate equipment.
Storage advice for specific materials - waste, timber, glass and textiles – in order to reduce the risks of potential health and safety hazards.
Installing and using shelving and racking units safely by following appropriate guidelines, installation instructions and spacing.
Assessing and controlling the risks of storing products and materials, including hazardous materials, food and specific materials like glass, wood and textiles.
Buying the right equipment for the designated task and your legal duties when purchasing machinery and disposing of old equipment.
Using signs, training, guidelines, emergency stop buttons, safety guards and protective equipment to minimise residual risks from tools and machinery.
What the law requires you to do to ensure your equipment is safe - from maintenance to assessing risks through inspection and taking appropriate action.
Regulations for using work equipment, assessing risks and buying, maintaining and disposing of equipment and advice for reducing the risks of equipment.
Staying up to date with your legal responsibilities for health and safety to protect staff, customers and visitors, have liability insurance and have a policy.
Management systems help control risk, reduce costs and improve your reputation, other benefits include increased morale and possible lower insurance premiums.
Using management systems to reduce health and safety risks and continually improve health and safety management in your business.
Lifting loads safely - plan the lift, get a good hold, avoid twisting the back, move smoothly - key techniques for reducing manual handling risks.
Avoiding lifting and carrying altogether, automating processes and providing mechanical equipment can all help reduce manual handling risks of moving loads.
Protecting employees from the risks of carrying, lifting, pushing and pulling loads by assessing and reducing the risks and ensuring staff are properly trained.
How to make sure your staff and visitors have the information they need to stay safe on your premises and avoid any potential risks to health and safety.
Key steps to avoid repetitive strain injury in your business, including carrying out a risk assessment, consulting employees and looking out for symptoms.
How to reduce the risk of repetitive strain injury in your business by encouraging breaks, adjusting workstations and reducing the weight of items handled.
The types of activities that can lead to repetitive strain injury, and types of worker that are particularly at risk including risks from cold and vibration.
Find out how to claim a Customs Duty waiver if you are bringing goods into Northern Ireland from Great Britain or countries outside the UK and EU which might otherwise be charged ‘at risk’ tariffs.
Have your say on how proposed increases to the minimum wage rates from April 2027 may impact your business and workers.
How to prevent and manage illness, injury and other ill effects, including social ones, stemming from the workplace by properly managing occupational health.