The way it works is I am a sole health and safety advisor working within a non-for-profit association that has 9 members within various construction disciplines.
Each member pays an annual fee which covers site audits, accident/investigations review of health and safety management systems, training and so on.
Whilst on a site carrying out an audit for a member for whom I represent who at the time where engaged as a sub-contractor to a principal contractor.
The works involved a refurb of school which included a complete overhaul of the schools existing services.
The supervisor for the member showed me round the works allowing me to carry out first hand observations thus enabling myself to draft up and issue a report based on my observations, Incidentally, I use Iauditor as checklist which has been amended by myself which now contains 117 probing questions ranging from excavation work to working at height with all the encompassing middle bits.
However, whilst on site I was presented with a serious breach of the asbestos regs where operatives including myself where being exposed to potential AIB fibres.
The supervisor who showed me round (who actually discovered this potential AIB) stated that he immediately reported it the PC site manager for further instruction, what followed beggar’s belief from a reputable PC, the site manager refused to accept that potential asbestos had been identified based on the existing asbestos survey which hadn’t been identified via the survey, the supervisor then insisted the site manager to come and inspect the potential nasty stuff to determine for himself what this material was. The site manager agreed with the supervisor and called for a test of this stuff where it was confirmed as AIB. Amazingly, the asbestos was left uncovered/unprotected for a number of days whilst the analysis was carried out. When confirmation AIB was indeed present, the site manger requested the cover to be replaced by simply using the existing fixings to temporarily site back the cover which merely required to be pushed back requiring little effort as the fixings where actually fixed directly into the AIB and not any solid timber.
The AIB was then scheduled to be removed by a licensed contractor. In the meantime, operatives where freely left to carry out their trades in the absence of
- The air not being tested for airborne fibres
- The affected area was not quarantined whist awaiting the removal of this AIB
- The panel where the AIB sat behind was not labelled as AIB
- The panel could have been quite easily removed without the aid of basic hand tools to remove the fixings
- The panel could have quite easily fell off the wall where it was fixed
- The Construction Phase Plan was not reviewed or amended to reflect this incident
- The site manager was rather blasé about the whole incident
- The site entrance did not alert or warn visitors that asbestos had been discovered
- An amended induction making visitors aware of the presence of AIB.
It was then I got a phone call from the manager of the member for whom I was representing stating I should have rang him first for further instruction before intervening as I did – he went on to state he had in fact received a rollicking from the PC contracts manager for not following the PC emergency procedures.
Finally, and unbelievably, at the time of receiving the phone call – I was relieving myself reading posters on the wall stating what colour my urine should be and that I should be checking for abnormalities within my gentleman region as an awareness campaign.
And here I am of being accused of being too thorough!!
You can’t make this stuff up!!