For some historical perspective F10 is far from a new product brought about by CDM.
Section 127(6) as qualified by S127(7) of the Factories Act 1961 (consolidating from 1937) required the notification by the CONTRACTOR of certain construction sites and additional legislation set out that this should be on the "prescribed form" - F10.
It was a piece of paper that would be typed on or completed by hand and sent to the local Principal Inspector.
At the top right hand corner there was the pre-printed code V PV NV.
So, when the F10 came in it landed on the Principal Inspector's desk and they put a ring round one of the options:
V = instruction to the relevant local Inspector to Visit.
PV = possible visit
NV - no visit - either the site was going to be of such short duration that it was not worth considering a planned inspection or the Principal Inspector was sufficiently confident in the Contractor that they would let them get on with the job without unannounced inspection UNLESS something cropped up to change that view.
Then those marked V or PV were photocopied and the copy of each such F10 would be passed to the relevant Inspector.
All the originals would be placed in the Contractor's file - documentary evidence of notification or the LACK of notification!
My boss for 4 years wasn't even too bothered if I didn't follow up the ones marked V - except when they related to the known poor performers.
He was much more interested in me keeping an eye on my patch and inspecting the sites which SHOULD have been notified but had NOT been. If a Contractor didn't know that they should notify or deliberately failed to do so, a very high probability that site standards would be poor.
+ many of the problems were on non-notifiable sites - so about keeping one's eyes open.
When the draft Regulations with the initial acronym CONDAM were being consulted on 30 years ago, it was mooted that HSE would apply a very similar approach to using the intelligence afforded by the extended information in F10.
So, now there would be a choice of V PV NV for each of the key duty holders - Client, Planning Supervisor, one or more Designers, and, usually, later the Principal Contractor.
At the time, HSE were very keen to emphasise that the time when there is most opportunity to eliminate hazards on site or at least to reduce the inherent reisks was at the very start of the project so HSE would be targeting some Clients and their Consultants - didn't really happen.
...and that laudible objective seems to have gone out of the window when HSE moved to a PREFERENCE for online notifications in 2007.
I attended an IOSH meeting that year where there was a presentation by a local HSE Inspector.
One of the QQ put to this Inspector was:
"What should be do if we don't know exactly when the work will start on site?"
"Just put in your best guess as to the month?"
My follow up was:
"What if we don't know the YEAR or even whether the project will ever make it to site - we've been working on the M74 completion project for at least 15 years and I still don't know whether it will be built".
"Well, I don't want to know about that. If it starts on site in 5 years time, I will have been moved into inspecting a different sector so I won't be around to see what is happening. So notify when you have a better idea of when construction will start."
This was precisely the sort of project that HSE had indicated 15 years previously that it intended to target at the early stages.
Huge civil engineering project in an urban area with considerable levels of chromium and other contamination to be considered. Far too late if it had been left to the Contractor to cope with - we needed to design to mitigate the issues or face major claims if we had not written what needed to be managed into the Contract Specification.
I trust that at a local level HSE still do use F10s to help inform which sites should receive attention (when the local Inspector has some time!), even if F10 does not appear to be informing HSE strategy when it comes to the front end duty holders.