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Home » Article » Reference-and-Education School Safety for School Governors - Managing your Schools Health and Safety
Paddy Swan filed under "Reference-and-Education"
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School Governors - Managing Health and Safety in your School.
What you need to know. If you read nothing else about Health and
Safety read this. It's about 1500 words long but it summarises
what you need to know about UK Health and Safety laws and
regulations in your school.
Changes to the Management of Health and Safety at Work
Regulations(1999) (MSHW) as laid out in the Regulations and
their Guidance have laid specific responsibilities on School
dutyholders to manage Health and Safety.
They need to do this by managing within a system. This is the
School Safety Management System(SMS) and every school should
have one.
Community, Community Special and Voluntary Controlled School
Governors are NOT dutyholders as described under Health and
Safety laws.
Who and what are dutyholders?
*Dutyholders are people with control over school safety. They
are the people who face enforcement action in the event of
anything going wrong. oIn main these are the Employer and the
Headteacher. oIn any event the Headteacher is the person in
control of the site and a dutyholder in any school.
However, Governors in Community schools have control over
budgets and need to support the head teacher, who is the "person
responsible for the site", and the main site dutyholder
*The LEA, the Foundation and/or the school may be the Employer
and is a Body Corporate for the purposes of the Safety law and
its' enforcement. oThat individuals as well as the school may be
subject of enforcement if they do not carry out their duties.
Other Governing Bodies, Directors and Trustees and individuals
may be dutyholders, as far as they exercise the function of
employer in Foundation, Private or Voluntary Aided Schools.
What are the requirements to manage safety? *The Management of
Health and Safety at Work Regulations defined that all schools
needed to manage safety. Thus any school needs to have a system
for carrying out its' H&S duties and also for reviewing safety
matters in case situations change within the school . This is
the School Safety Management System (SMS) and Governors need to
be part of this system. * The SMS needs to be used to manage
safety actively as part of the School's normal operations.
Having an SMS and operating it is part of the normal work of the
school and should be accommodated in resources and budgets
within the school framework. The SMS is the framework within
which the school needs to address all its' Health and Safety
duties.
What are the main H&S duties for the school :
*Risk Assessment - The School needs assess all its' risks and
put control measures put in place to reduce them. This means
that a Risk Assessment System needs to be part of the school
SMS. *Training - The H&S duties also mean that the School needs
to train and give information /instruction to its' staff and
some visitors. These H&S duties mean that the school needs to be
able to deem staff competent to play their part in the system.
It also needs to deliver job specific training and/or
instruction. *Policies and Procedures - The school needs to have
a School health and Safety Policy and suitable procedures which
should flow from the risk assessments made. It is expected that
all policies and procedures will be developed with input from,
and consultation of ,staff. The Policy and the Procedures need
to be available to staff and should be reviewed regularly.
*Personal protective Equipment (PPE) - Flowing from the school
Risk Assessment System control measure will be identified and
some of these e.g for school cleaning, will indicate that PPE
needs to be used for some operations. The school needs to ensure
that the PPE is available, in good condition and that employees
and pupils wear it and use it properly. *Managing Safety - The
Head teacher and any Governing Body, whether it is the Employer
or not, has a duty to ensure that safety is properly managed in
school and this means : that a SMS is in place and
works. that all Risk Assessments, Policies, Procedures
etc are appropriate to the specific circumstances of the school.
What are the duties of the Governors under the SMS ?
*Whether or not the Governing Body is the Employer it still
carries out its' duties by oversight of the SMS and actively
checks by monitoring and auditing the School SMS and ensures
that it fits the school's circumstances. The Employer Governing
Body as a dutyholder would have the additional legal
responsibility of providing policies and specific procedures
together with resources to manage safety. *The Regulations point
out that it is good practice for a Governor to be appointed to
have responsibility for Health and Safety and its' management in
the school. *Under the Regulations there is a requirement under
Safety law for School Staff to be consulted . oA good way for
this to happen is to enlist staff and pupils in a School Safety
Committee which helps to run, and is part of, the School SMS.
Accidents do happen?
Health and Safety compliance need not be a major burden. It
simply needs to be put in place because accidents do happen and
if they do they should be approached using a safety approach to
learn from them and as opportunities to review Risk Assessment
and reappraise control measures. Accidents can be to pupils,
staff or visitors/contractors and can result in litigation
and/or prosecution. Accidents to children which have ended in
litigation against schools have often been unsuccessful if the
accident has been shown to be a result of play. The view taken
by courts seems to be that play is necessary for a child's
development and sometimes this can result in accidents but the
school need not take undue or unreasonably costly action to
avoid all accidents at all costs. Even for accidents caused
during horseplay the courts have indicated that negligence or
extreme recklessness needs to be demonstrably proven.
Reasonable safety is the concept which is the benchmark to judge
response to safety matters against and provided the school has
reasonable systems in place which indicate that it is managing
safety and using good practice it should be secure. Prosecution
and enforcing UK Safety Law
HSE is the body which inspects and enforces the Safety law and
approximately 25% of all prosecutions for breaches which it made
over were attributed to breaches of management duties under the
Management of Health and Safety at Work Regulations. Having said
that action by HSE involving enforcement action against schools
is rare and prosecution rarer still. There are approximately 80
breaches per year in Primary Schools. Accidents are not so rare
unfortunately and approximately 11,000 accidents were reported
in Education under RIDDORS (3 day accidents) in 1999/2000 of
which about one third were due to slips and trips.
Finally Provided a school follows good practice and the rules no
one is likely to be at risk from enforcement or legal action.
The Governing Body and individual Governors need to support the
Headteacher in carrying out their duty under the law and
co-operate with any Employer. They can do this by ensuring that
safety is managed in the school under a Safety Management
System. This ensures that the school is in compliance with the
regulations. Any Governing Body, whether employer or not needs
to be seen to be playing its' full part in any school Safety
Management System by oversight and target setting, monitoring,
auditing and reviewing, and ensuring that resources are
available to help the head manage school H&S. By doing this and
playing its' full part the Governing Body should find that
school overall safety will be improved and accident levels drop.
Background Reading and further information
HSE has a wide range of appropriate FREE and other documents
which give guidance and advice available from www.hse.gov.uk.
*HSE Five Steps to Risk Assessment -
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg163.pdf
*HSE A Guide to Risk Assessment Requirements -
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg218.pdf
*Need Help on Health and Safety -Comprehensive guide to sources
of help INDG 322 http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg322.pdf
*Information and Help on Work Related Stress from HSE available
on www.hse.gov.uk/stress
*Managing Health and Safety Successfully - Five Steps to Success
INDG 275 http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg275.pdf
*Violence at Work INDG 69(rev)
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg69.pdf
*Slips and Trips in the Education Sector - Education Information
Sheet Number 2 - EDIS2 http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/edis2.pdf
*Consulting Employees on Health and Safety - A Guide to the Law
- INDG 232 http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg232.pdf and
http://www.hse.gov.uk/workers/involvement/index.htm is the HSC
statement, case studies and also lays out their policy for more
worker participation.
*Reduce Risks Cut Costs -The real cost of accidents and ill
health at work - INDG 355http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg355.pdf
*RIDDOR Information Sheet - RIDDOR Reporting What the Incident
Contact Centre Can Do For You - MISC310(rev1)
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/misc310.pdf
*Workplace Health and Safety a Guide - INDG 244
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg244.pdf
*Health and Safety Training - What You Need to Know - INDG 345
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg345.pdf
*Use of Contractors - A Joint Responsibility - INDG 368
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg368.pdf
*Working Together - Guidance for working with Contractors and
Suppliers - INDG 268(rev) http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/indg268.pdf
*Reporting School Accidents - Guidance for schools on RIDDORS
http://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/edis1.htm
*The HSC's guidance documents, "Managing Health and Safety in
Schools" (ISBN 0717607704) and "Health and Safety Guidance for
School Governors" (ISBN 0717612988) can be obtained for £5.95
each from HSE Books on 01787 881165 or hsebooks@prolog.uk.com.
About the author:
Dr. Paddy Swan is a qualified teacher with senior management
experience in UK schools and colleges. He also has almost 25
years safety experience in industry. He has developed over 100
online and multimedia safe systems training solutions. Paddy is
the author of School Basic Safety for Classroom and Support
staff for UK schools and the Headteacher's Safety Management
Toolkit at http://www.swaneducation.co.uk
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