UK SMART Ltd. | Safety Management And Risk Training

 

 
     
 
 
     
 

 

SMART News For

 

Suffolk Chamber of Commerce

 

UK SMART Ltd. is a participant of the Enterprise Engagement Programme.

From 1st July 2010 - 20 June 2011.

 

Download the Enterprise Engagement Programme Membership Cert

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UK SMART Ltd. achieve the British Safety Council’s International Safety Award

 

The Director of UK SMART Ltd. has assisted two government organisations in achieving the British Safety Council’s International Safety Award.

 

This is a great achievement for the organisations in the development and continuous improvement of its health and safety management systems and for UK Smart Ltd to have been able to provide the support and direction to enable the award to have been achieved.

 

Further information on the award process can be found at www.britsafe.org/events/isa.aspx

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UK SMART Ltd. website goes carbon-neutral

 

To show our commitment to the environment we host with STRATO who offer carbon-neutral web hosting which makes our website CO2 Free.

 

Further information can be found at www.strato-hosting.co.uk/holding/about_us/climate_protection/index.html

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Company merger

 

AB Training Services merge with UK SMART Ltd.
 
AB Training Services started in 2008 as a sole trader set up what is now UK SMART Ltd (Safety Management And Risk Training) in May 2009.
 
After a year of providing Health & Safety, Food Hygiene and First Aid Training / Assessing the proprietor decided to set up as a limited company to provide an additional product A Safety Consultancy Service.
 
Since 2008 the business has been growing and has now built up a comprehensive portfolio of training and a range of highly satisfied customers.
 
UK SMART Ltd (Safety Management And Risk Training) was formed in 2009 and now offer the following training packages on a local, regional and if required a national basis.
 
     HSE First Aid at Work
     Emergency First Aid (Appointed Persons)
     Pediatric First Aid
     Sports First Aid
     Care & Nursing Industry First Aid
     Level 2 and 3 Health & Safety
     Supervising Health & safety
     Advanced Health & Safety
     IOSH Qualifications (via our associates)
     Level 2 and 3 Food safety
     Principles of Manual Handling
     Principles of COSH
     Principles of Risk Assessment
     Fire Safety Courses (via associates)
     National Pool Lifeguard Qualification (Unit 1 & 2) (via our associates)
     Pool Lifeguard Trainers Course (via our associates)
     NVQ Level 3 and 4 Occupational Safety Health – Route for membership of IOSH and IIRSM
 
The Director of UK SMART Ltd is a member of several industry trade bodies/ organisations that are only available to join through satisfy standards of quality through their strict auditing and include IOSH; IIRSM; CIEH; RIPH; IVA; UKRLP.

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HR managers targeted on stress
 
The HSE is promoting its revised online stress-management tools throughout March, with human-resources managers and directors the focus of an awareness campaign.
 
The regulator says it will soon be writing to the chief executive of every large company in the UK and their HR managers to help them combat stress in their workplace. An online advertising campaign will also be launched to warn companies about the costs of work-related stress, and how it can be tackled.
 
The public sector is a particular concern, as work-related stress, depression, or anxiety accounts for 60 per cent of sickness absence here, compared with an all-industry average of 39 per cent. The sector lost 1.8 million days during 2006/07 as a result of this type of mental ill health.
 
Continuing a similar format to the last two years, the HSE’s work programme for 2009/10 will see inspectors concentrate on follow-up inspections of organisations where initial contact has already been made. The reasoning for this approach is to allow the Executive to collect data on how effective the implementation of stress-management systems has been in helping organisations deal with the issue.

 
Further information can be found at www.hse.gov.uk/stress

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New awarding body announced

 
Having formed in 2008, HABC is a new Awarding Body recognised by Ofqual, DCELLS and CCEA to award accredited Food Safety and Health and Safety qualifications. Other qualifications, including First Aid, will follow later this year.
 
Prior to establishing HABC, members of our team often had conversations with trainers and corporate organisations regarding the level of service that they expected from an Awarding Body. We have listened very carefully to these comments and acted upon them. The result is HABC; your responsive, customer driven Awarding Body that will consistently deliver to the high standards that you deserve.
 
Whilst HABC is an independent company, we are committed to providing the same high levels of customer care, value and quality synonymous with Highfield.co.uk Ltd. If you need to speak to any member of our team you will be able to do so, no matter how technical, large or small your query is. Additionally, HABC have invested in the latest technology which will ensure that our online Centre registration facility and delivery of examination results are quicker than ever before. Last but by no means least, we are confident that you will find that our competitive, transparent pricing structure represents real 'value for money'.

 
Further information can be found at www.highfieldabc.com

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Health and Safety (Offences) Act 2008 receives Royal Assent

 
The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) welcomes the Health and Safety (Offences) Act 2008 which received Royal Assent yesterday (16 October 2008).

 
Welcoming the announcement, HSE Chair Judith Hackitt said: "The new Act sends out an important message to those who flout the law. However, good employers and good managers have nothing to fear. In fact, they have much to gain.

 
"I want to remind businesses that there are no changes to their existing legal duties and that important safeguards are in place to ensure these new powers will be used sensibly and proportionately.

 
"Our enforcement policy targets those who cut corners, gain commercial advantage over competitors by failing to comply with health and safety law and who put workers and the public at risk."

 
Summary of current and new penalties under the Act

 
Current maxima:
     £5k or £20k for summary offence in lower courts, depending on offence; unlimited fine for

           indictable offence;
     imprisonment not available for most offences (but up to 6 months in magistrates court / 2 years

           in Crown Court for few offences eg failing to comply with a prohibition notice or breaching

           a licensing requirement).

 
New maxima:
     £20k fines in lower courts for nearly all summary offences, unlimited fines in higher courts;
     Imprisonment for nearly all offences – up to 12 months Footnote 1 in Magistrates Courts

          and 2 years in the Crown Court.

 
The Act, which covers Great Britain and Northern Ireland, will come into force in January 2009.

 
There are strict guidelines which are observed by the regulators in their approach to the prosecution of health and safety offences. The HSE Enforcement Policy Statement. makes it clear that prosecutions should be in the public interest and where one or more of a list of circumstances apply.

 

These include:
     where, death was a result of a breach of the legislation;
     there has been reckless disregard of health and safety requirements;
     there have been repeated breaches which give rise to significant risk, or persistent and

           significant poor compliance; or
     false information has been supplied willfully, or there has been intent to deceive in relation

           to a matter which gives rise to significant risk.

 

Prosecutions of individuals by health and safety regulators are not undertaken lightly. Any prosecutions of individuals are subject to the same strict considerations set out above and are only taken if warranted, and not in lieu of a case against their employer.

 
Further information can be found at

 
www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2008/ukpga_20080020_en_1

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SMEs not ready for Corporate Manslaughter Act

 
Only half of businesses in the UK are prepared for the Corporate Manslaughter Act, despite the introduction of the legislation on 6 April, say experts.

 
UK SMART Ltd. has advised SME's in Suffolk and surrounding counties in the East of England businesses to review the risk management procedures which they already have in place as they may not be able to provide adequate protection once the law comes into force.

 
Insurance companies have estimated that the new act could cost businesses an estimated £20 million in legal feevs.

 
Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007
 

Insurers are saying: 'With less than 100 days to go until the Corporate Manslaughter Act comes into force, companies could face prosecution for breach of their duty in areas they have not previously considered.'
 
The new law could hold executives to account if corporate negligence results in a fatality at work.

 
Criminal convictions and unlimited fines could be faced by businesses if a failure by managers has been proved to be responsible.

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The future of first aid approvals - an update on the review of the Health and Safety (First-Aid) Regulations 1981
 

A joint statement by the Health and Safety Executive and the Scottish Qualifications Authority
 

Introduction
 

This paper will be of interest to employer duty holders, first aiders and first aid training providers based in Scotland. It supplements a joint statement by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA). Readers should refer to that statement for an overview of new training courses for first aiders in the workplace and proposals for approving and monitoring training providers that wish to run these courses.

 
In further developing those proposals outlined in the HSE/ QCA joint statement, HSE needs to ensure training providers that want to run the one day emergency first aid at work (EFAW) course only, can gain approval for this purpose in England, Wales and Scotland. The relevant authority for accrediting qualifications in Scotland is the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA). This statement provides an update on recent discussions between HSE and the SQA about the proposals.
 

Role of the SQA
 

The SQA is a non-departmental public body sponsored by the Scottish Government Education and Lifelong Learning Department. It is the national body in Scotland responsible for the development, accreditation, assessment and certification of qualifications other than degrees. The overall aim of the SQA is to manage the qualifications system to ensure students fully contribute to the economy, society and communities of Scotland.

 
In general, any training organisation wishing to offer an accredited qualification/course in Scotland will need to gain approval from an Awarding Body approved by the SQA. The potential benefits of accrediting first aid qualifications for the workplace are outlined in the HSE/QCA joint statement.
 

Proposed accreditation of EFAW by the SQA
 

It has been proposed that training providers already approved by HSE to run first aid at work (FAW) courses will be given automatic approval to run the new training courses once they are introduced. New providers that want to deliver the full FAW course will need to obtain approval from HSE. Any provider based in Scotland that wishes to run the EFAW course only (and not the full FAW course) will need to gain approval from an Awarding Body approved by the SQA.
 
In discussion with HSE, the SQA has confirmed that in principle, it could accredit the EFAW qualification. In doing so, it is recognised that the success of such an approach may be influenced by the overall costs to training providers. This has to be balanced against the need for external validation of training to help ensure standards are maintained, promoting public confidence and the competency of first aiders.
 

Next steps
 

HSE will include the proposed approval arrangements in draft revised guidance for employers and training providers. The guidance will be subject to consultation and the views of stakeholder groups will be fully considered before finalising the drafts. HSE should then be in a position to announce a date for introducing the new training courses.

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A Healthier England from 1st July 2007

 
From 1st of July 2007 virtually all enclosed public places and workplaces in England will become smokefree. A smokefree England will ensure a healthier environment, so everyone can socialise, relax, travel, shop and work free from secondhand smoke.
Further information is available at www.smokefreeengland.co.uk

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GO SMOKEFREE

 
Imagine one of the best things you could do in your life. Making a complete break from smoking. Think about how great it would be to leave those health worries behind you. Picture yourself, waking up and feeling totally fresh. Millions of people in Britain have already gone smokefree and you can too.
Further information at www.gosmokefree.co.uk

 

 

SMART News For

 

Suffolk Chamber of Commerce

read more >

 

UK SMART Ltd. achieve the British Safety Council’s International Safety Award

read more >

 

UK SMART Ltd. website goes carbon-neutral

read more >

 

Company merger

read more >

 

HR managers targeted on stress

read more >

 

New awarding body announced

read more >

 

Health and Safety (Offences)

read more >

 

SMEs not ready for Corporate Manslaughter Act

read more >

 
The future of first aid approvals

read more >
 

A Healthier England

read more >

 
GO SMOKEFREE

read more >

 

 
     
 
 
 
 

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