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#1 Posted : 08 September 2009 15:13:00(UTC)
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Posted By Elliot Drew Hello all First post so please be gentle! I'm looking to book a few people onto a RAMS course, but am unsure if there is an industry recognised course or accrediting body in the Construction Industry. I've seen CIEH courses available, but do they hold any more weight than any other training providers own certification? I'll probably be asking the same question for other half and one day courses, e.g Manual Handling, Abrasive Wheels, Working at Height etc, so is there a website that can show what the most respected courses are? Thanks in advance for your help Elliot
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#2 Posted : 08 September 2009 16:21:00(UTC)
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Posted By Crim Hi Elliot, Welcome to the forum. My recent dealings with HSE Inspectors have advised to check out all training providers yourself, even the most reputable. You are required to ensure trainers are competent and need to show proof of your checks. You should just ask the question and the more competent will have no problem in providing proof. It will then be up to you to decide. I hope I have made sense?
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#3 Posted : 08 September 2009 16:39:00(UTC)
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Posted By Elliot Drew Thanks for the response Crim. It does make sense. By the sounds of it, the onus is on you to ensure the company you're using is competent. The company I've been looking at using is a NEBOSH Accredited Centre (although I haven't verified this with NEBOSH yet!) They are also a CSkills Accredited Site Safety Plus Provider. But...does that make them competent to deliver a RAMS course, hmmm...
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#4 Posted : 08 September 2009 18:53:00(UTC)
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Posted By Crim Elliot, one example was a client of mine had a one day fork truck training course, the HSE inspector compared that with CITB 5 day refresher course. You get what you pay for so make sure it's what you need.
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#5 Posted : 08 September 2009 19:54:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ian G Hutchings Hi Elliot Just watch terminology if you contact anyone as RAMS is a term used for reliability, availability, maintainability and safety, common in safety engineering and risk management. Best wishes Ian
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#6 Posted : 08 September 2009 22:35:00(UTC)
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Posted By Richard Altoft we offer a British Safety Council accrediated risk assessment course leading to assignment and BSC certificate and also do custom made courses for several of our clients. Contact me if we can help R
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#7 Posted : 08 September 2009 23:13:00(UTC)
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Posted By Ron Hunter As others advise, a wary approach is required here. The law requires those conducting Risk Assessments (my assertion being that a Method Statement is merely a style of inverted Risk Assessment) be competent. You need to consider all that MHSWR Regs 3, 4 & 7 ACoP say on this. Individual pre-requisites are a key issue,as are the course objectives and outcomes. Initial and on-going assessment and professional development, along with access to adequate resources (including time) are also key to continuing competency. You should also choose a provider who can demonstrate current knowledge and understanding of your particular industry.
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