Safety on the Building Site

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Under the Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992, you become a ‘principal’ (unless you’re living in the house while the work is going on).
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As a principal it’s also up to you to ensure that people working on the site don’t get hurt, which means you also must identify hazards and remove them, isolate them, or minimize them as much as possible if the first two options are not open to you.
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Your health and safety site plan
- The person responsible for health and safety on site.

- Identification and control of potential hazards.
- Posting of notices and warnings of potential hazards.
- Restriction of access to the site to authorised people only.
- Guidance on ensuring a safe working environment at all times, for example, avoiding stacking things that could topple over.
- Instruction in safe methods and practices.
- Provision for safety meetings.
- Safety audits on plant and procedures.
- The recording and investigation of accidents.
Courtesy of Consumerbuild.org.nz
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PREVENTING INJURIES IN RESIDENTIAL CONSTRUCTION:
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The Residential building sector has the hightest rate of injuries for the New Zealand construciton Industry.
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Most common causes of serious harm injuries are slips, trips and falls from height, noise and hazardous substance exposure, and manual handling
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The residential building sector is predominately made up of small businesses; injuries in this sector can have a serious effect on a business's productivity .
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It's time to change how you work:
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The right tools for the job - make sure you have it covered / emergency procedures /Hazards on site/ Accident - Near Miss reporting
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TALK TO the Professionals for Site Safe -
Check out Site Safe here....
