Hi Billy
However tempting it is I would not base processes for managing health and safety on what the regulator might way if things go wrong.
Refresher training has been discussed at intermittent intervals on these Forums.
UK legislation has moved on from the days of many prescriptive and proscriptive requirements either in legislation or supporting guidance to a "goal-setting" regime where, usually, you have to consider what is and is NOT reasonably practicable.
Hence there are very few scenarios where either the law or guidance says You MUST provide a person doing this, with specific training", and even fewer where there is clear guidance to say you must refresh that training at specific intervals, though some training providers would try and tell you otherwise - but they would, wouldn't they?!?
The extent to which refresher training is required is heavily dependent on the ongoing competence of someone to do each of their tasks and that in turn depends on how effective the initial training was, how well it was taken on board by the learner, and whether the key content of the training has been reinforced by practice.
So, as example, you could train someone up to e.g. operate a fork truck, but unless the person then regularly operates a fork truck, they are unlikely to retain the knowledge from the training for very long. Hence training just in case someone might do a task is often likely to be a waste of resources.
In contrast, if that person does the training, then operates a fork truck every day of their working life, and is supervised in operating the fork truck safely, what benefit do you get from refresher training one, two or three years down the line UNLESS something changes?
How many training course (on whatever topic) did you attend say 10 years ago then have no opportunity to put the learning into practice? How much do you still remember?!?!
Edited by user 10 November 2023 17:06:12(UTC)
| Reason: Fingers out of sync when touch typing