Tricky one st425.
If the person was an employee then the PPE Regulations say that the PPE should result in the employee being "adequately protected" but teh regulations do not define what that means.
So, I think you then have to go back to the parent legislation, i.e. HSWA which sets the same standard for both employees (Section 2) and others (Section 3), i.e. to do what is "reasonably practicable", which means, whatever the case law you fall back on, considering the risk and balancing reduction in risk v cost (in time, money and effort).
Now this is where HSE get confused with the difference between hazard and risk. In L25 the guidance on the PPE Regs they say:
"PPE is not necessary where the risk is insignificant, for example, in most workplaces there will be some risk of people dropping objects onto their feet, but it is only where objects heavy enough to injure the feet are being handled that the risk will be high enough to require the provision of safety footwear."
HSE also says on its webpages that you should never omit PPE "just because it's a 5 minute job", but this statement does not reflect the level of potential risk.
So you could have a heavy object being handled but with absolutely minimal chance of dropping it onto e.g. someone's foot - therefore very low risk. Conversely, the object(s) might be lighter but might have sharper edges and be much more likely to be dislodged from e.g. a worktop - much higher risk and protective footwear (and more) would be much more likely to be a requirement - BUT depending on what each person in the vicinity is doing.
So, in effect both pieces of HSE guidance are largely based on considering the "hazard" rather than the "risk".
Both of the prosecutions referred to in this thread resulted in guilty pleas so we don't know what would have happened had they gone to trial. In the railway case it is possible that the defendant might have been found guilty for reasons other than non-provision of PPE and we don't even know whether the charge was worded so as to link the breach with causation of the accident. Struck on the legs by a very heavy rail - what PPE would have been expected? Not your run of the mill hard hat, eye protection, hi viz, gloves and boots.
So, to your volunteers helping to build a stone wall. Not all of them are likely to be in the direct line of fire when a stone falls off, or the wall collapses. So what is reasonably practicable is going to vary both in terms of what each volunteer does, and for how long they might be at risk.
So, for some, or most, gloves (that for most could be on shared issue and reused on the next visit, perhaps by different users) are going to be reasonably practicable.
However, the nature of these volunteers is such that many will probably come in their own sturdy walking boots. That might be all that is required for many of those turning up, with focus on who needs protective footwear being confined to those at the "sharp end"! [and, of course, with the overriding presumption that any PPE should be the last line of defence].
If you start off with the presumption that every single volunteer will need to have safety boots provided whether they turn up once or every week for a year, could easily make the voluntary activity a non starter.
Now, of course, if we were to reimagine the project as building a 6 foot high flood defence, with most of the workforce being volunteers, then you might have a vehicle loaded up with very big stones or blocks and lifting equipment, and quite likcly more people would be at risk for longer periods. Different ball game and you probably start off with a larger budget.
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Edited by user 01 February 2020 16:27:59(UTC)
| Reason: Changed font to highlight quotes from HSE