I did 3 years as a prison SHEF manager. Staff come under sect 2, prisoners and visitors come under section 3.
Some anomalies with regards to reporting of RIDDOR. Examples being having to report prisoner sporting injuries. If I had only x2 RIDDORs in a month then it was considered to be a good month and we were not even a big prison.
Fire safety is different in that all fire exits are always locked and fire extinguishers normally locked away to stop them being used as weapons. Prisoner’s evacuation drills are set in stone, progressive/horizontal evacuation. At my interview they asked me what I would do in the event of a fire. I said I don’t know, I will need to read their fire drills first and follow them. I told them that I was not out to change a tried and tested system. They like answers like that.
It is strange but nothing can prepare you for what goes on behind the wire. We had staff walk on the first day. Not just because of the violence and the sick things that happen behind the wall, but because they fell trapped and enclosed. My biggest fear was not getting assaulted. It was not locking a gate properly after me or loosing my keys. Until you have been there you will not know how it feels. Stress is a massive subject in the happy world of custodial safety.
So far as the rest goes it’s all the same. In short being a prison SHEF manager is just like being the SHEF in a small city, you have everything in there. MH, COSHH, PUWER, LOLER, 1000 bed hotels, segregation unit, violence, drugs, self harm, dirty protests, kitchens, facilities maintenance, x-rays, microwaves, legionella, Hep A, B, C, D, E, F etc, new and expectant mums, OK I’m bored now, but if you can think of a health and safety issue, then its found in a prison..
Drop me a line if you want to chat.
Drop me a line if you want to chat.