Originally Posted by: achrn Originally Posted by: John Elder Hazardous escapes of substances (27) The unintentional release or escape of any substance which could cause personal injury to any person other than through the combustion of flammable liquids or gases.
Given that people drown, if one is going to interpret this requirement that precisely, then you'll need to be reporting each spilled glass of water:
1: unitentinal release or escape - yes
2: substance which could cause death - yes
3: combustion - no.
I would argue that generator fumes are not an unintentional release - nothing 'escaped'. If the generator fumes didn't exit the generator, the generator wouldn't run. This was a 100% intentional release of fumes. If you need a precisely nuanced leval of pedantry to read the words just precisley enough to include the thing, but not precisely enough to exclude it another way, I feel that it is not the intended reading of the words.
I'm quite surprised that running a generator in a warehouse causes a problem - carbon monoxide is lighter than air - if any was accumulating it should have been accumulating up at the ceiling (that's why your CO monitor instructions tell you to fix it to the ceiling or at the top of the wall). I'd be astonished if enough to affect health was still tehre next day - but you could just take a trip down to B&Q and buy a handful of monitors to reassure staff.
It we consider why we have the RIDDOR System it is to ensure that if deemed necessary things can be looked into and hopefully prevented from happening again.
An unintentional release of a substance is an escape due to the loss of the designed containment system or structure and the substance has managed to get out.
Yes, the fumes from the generator are an intended function of the plant but consider this.
Bearing in mind that the term a Reasonable Man has a status in health and safety law what would a reasonable man do. Would he paint a line across the factory as a boundary and command with hands raised to heaven that “No fumes shall pass”, or would he erect an approved separation screen as per the originators initial post to control the dust temperature and perhaps incorrectly any fumes and vapours.
If as I believe that is the case otherwise he is not a reasonable man and was therefore in failing in his duty of care and is now negligent, the approved separation screen (Containment) let the fumes and vapours out of the work area e.g. a loss of containment and therefore as it was designed if not incorrectly, to keep in the fumes and vapours it is then an unintentional release of a substance which has potentially caused injury.
As for the glass of water the RIDDOR would be more likely due to dying as the result of a slip trip or fall or such fall causing a major break of a major bone and not drowning on the contents of the spill.
Let’s consider a release from a large tank filling a compartment and an unsuspecting person within the compartment did not drown or die but was hospitalised for a day or two due to hypothermia as it took time to get them out of the compartment.
Now let’s say the cause of the release was an intentional action by a person.
Would a reasonable man release the contents of the tank knowing someone could become trapped in the compartment? I think not. Now if there was no way to tell that someone was in the compartment or that checks were not carried out to prove that there was someone in the compartment the ignoring negligence the consequence of the deliberate release was unintentional otherwise its murder.
If the consequence of the release is unintentional and if we considered that a reasonable man would not have released the substance knowing the consequence of his actions and having been unable to prove any different then in law the actual deliberate release of the substance becomes an unintentional release and its only manslaughter and not murder as you didn’t do enough or control or remove the risk.
The resulting RIDDOR due to an unintentional release of a substance bear in mind nobody died, would hopefully get to the bottom of what went wrong and improve things to prevent it happening again whereas you under your reasoning you might not report it as to you it might have been considered a deliberate action.
Edited by user 08 December 2021 20:19:38(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified