This Scottish Clay Target Association Limited (SCTA) "Health and Safety Policy" document is issued only for the guidance of affiliated Grounds and Members with a view to assisting and encouraging the maintenance of a safe clay target shooting environment. It must not be considered as a definitive interpretation of the "Health and Safety" legislation.

It is specifically incumbent on every Affiliated Ground and Member involved in the management of any clay target shooting event to be fully aware of the legislation as it applies in their particular circumstance.  Grounds and Members must seek the necessary professional advice and the SCTA assumes no responsibility in this regard.

RIDDOR  Explained

What is RIDDOR?

It stands for the

Reporting of
Injuries,
Diseases and
Dangerous
Occurrences
Regulations 1995.

Sometimes referred to as RIDDOR 95 or RIDDOR for short, these Regulations came into force on 1 April 1996.

Why and What, do I need to know about RIDDOR?

If you are an employer, self-employed or in control of work premises you will have duties under RIDDOR.

RIDDOR requires you to report some work-related accidents, diseases and dangerous occurrences. It applies to all work activities.

What do I need to do?

Not very much! For most businesses and clubs, a reportable accident, dangerous occurrence or case of disease is a comparatively rare event. Please spend five minutes reading this file, and then keep it handy so you'll know what to do if you need to make a report.

Why should I report?

Reporting accidents and ill health at work (or when you employ someone) is a legal requirement. The information enables the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) and local authorities (referred to as 'the enforcing authorities') to identify where and how risks arise and to investigate serious accidents. These guidelines can then help you and give you advice on how to reduce injury, ill health and accidental loss.

When do I need to make a report?
Death or major injury

If there is an accident connected with work and: your employee or a self-employed person working on your premises is killed or suffers a major injury (including as a result of physical violence);

Or a member of the public is killed or taken to hospital;

You must notify the enforcing authority without delay (eg by telephone).They will ask for brief details about your business, the injured person and the accident; and within ten days you must follow this up with a completed accident report form (F2508 available from HSE.) But see 'Who do I report to?” on page 4 for new ways of reporting from April 2001. A form is included with this leaflet which you may copy. See page 6 for definitions of major injuries.

Over-three-day injury

If there is an accident connected with work (including an act of physical violence) and your employee, or a self-employed person working on your premises, suffers an “over-three day injury” you must send a completed accident report form (F2508) to the enforcing authority within ten days. But see 'Who do I report to?' on Page 4 for new ways of reporting from April 2001. A form is included with this leaflet which you may copy. An over-three-day injury is one which is not major but results in the injured person being away from work


Or;

unable to do the full range of their normal duties for more than three days (including any days they wouldn't normally be expected to work such as weekends, rest days or holidays) not counting the day of the injury itself.

Disease

If a doctor notifies you that your employee suffers from a reportable work-related disease you must send a completed disease report form (F2508A) to the enforcing authority. But see 'Who do I report to?' on page 4 for new ways of reporting from April 2001. You will find a summary of the reportable diseases on page 9. A full list is included with the pad of report forms and in the guide to the Regulations, or you can simply ring the HSE Info Line to check whether a disease is reportable.

Dangerous occurrence

If something happens which does not result in a reportable injury, but which clearly could have done, it may be a dangerous occurrence which must be reported immediately (eg by telephone) to the enforcing authority. You will find a summary of the reportable dangerous occurrences on page 7. A full list is included with the pad of report forms and in the guide to the Regulations, or you can simply ring the HSE Info Line to find out.

Within ten days you must follow this up with a completed accident report form (F2508). But see 'Who do I report to?' on page 4 for new ways of reporting from April 2001.


I'm self-employed. How does this apply to me?

If you are working in someone else's premises and suffer either;

·       a major injury or,

·       an injury which means you cannot do the full range of your normal work for more than three days, that person will be responsible for reporting your injury; so, if possible, you should make sure they know about it. If you are working in your own premises, and:

You or a member of the public is injured; or

There is a dangerous occurrence; or

A doctor tells you you have a work-related disease or condition;

You need to report it. But, as a self-employed person you don't need to notify immediately if you suffer a major injury on your own premises. However, either you or someone acting for you must send in a report form (F2508) within ten days.

But see the next section for new ways of reporting from April 2001.


Who do I report to?

From April 2001 you can report to the Incident Contact Centre via a number of methods:

By phone      0845 300 9923 (8.30am - 5.00pm)

By fax           0845 300 9924 (any time)

By Internet    www.RIDDOR.gov.uk (any time)

By                email RIDDOR@natbrit.com

By post,        Incident Contact Centre, Caerphilly Business Park, Caerphilly CF83 3GG


Alternatively, you may contact the environmental health department of your local authority if your business is:

Office-based;

Retail or wholesale;

Warehousing;

Hotel and catering;

Sports or leisure;

Residential accommodation, excluding nursing homes;

Concerned with places of worship;

Pre-school child care;

Mobile vending.

The address and telephone number will be in the telephone book under the authority's name. For all other types of business it will be HSE's area office. Look in the telephone book under HSE to obtain the address and telephone number. If you have any difficulty finding the details, ring the HSE Info Line. The number is at the end of this leaflet. Railway and mines incident reporting continue to operate under the existing arrangements.


What records do I need to keep?

You must keep a record of any reportable injury, disease or dangerous occurrence for three years after the date on which it happened. This must include:

The date and method of reporting; the date, time and place of the event; personal details of those involved; and

A brief description of the nature of the event or disease.

 

Guidance on keeping records

You could, for example, choose to keep your records by:

         keeping copies of report forms in a file;

         recording the details on a computer;

         maintaining a written log.

You can keep the record in any form you wish. If you use the Internet or phone to report, you may not have your own copy of the official reporting forms (F2508/F2508A). To help with this you will be sent a copy of your own report and given the chance to correct any errors in it.


Is that all? Yes

For the majority of people with duties under the Regulations this leaflet contains all you need to know. If you have any questions, for example on reportable dangerous occurrences or diseases, just ring HSE's Info Line. If, however, you would like to have more information to hand, a guide to the Regulations is available (see the order form at the end of this leaflet). It contains the full text of the Regulations and notes on interpretation. It also includes the lists of reportable diseases and dangerous occurrences. Separate guidance is also available covering the application of RIDDOR to railways; tramways etc

Definition of major injuries, dangerous occurrences and diseases Reportable major injuries are:

Fracture other than to fingers, thumbs or toes;

Amputation;

Dislocation of the shoulder, hip, knee or spine;

Loss of sight (temporary or permanent);

Chemical or hot metal burn to the eye or any penetrating injury to the eye;

Injury resulting from an electric shock or electrical burn leading to unconsciousness or requiring resuscitation or admittance to hospital for more than 24 hours;

Any other injury: leading to hypothermia, heat-induced illness or unconsciousness; or requiring resuscitation; or requiring admittance to hospital for more than 24 hours;

Unconsciousness caused by asphyxia or exposure to a harmful substance or biological agent;

Acute illness requiring medical treatment, or loss of consciousness arising from absorption of any substance by inhalation, ingestion or through the skin;

Acute illness requiring medical treatment where there is reason to believe that this resulted from exposure to a biological agent or its toxins or infected material.


Reportable dangerous occurrences are:

(This list summarises each of the dangerous occurrences - see page 3)

1. Collapse, overturning or failure of load-bearing parts of lifts and lifting equipment;

2. Explosion, collapse or bursting of any closed vessel or associated pipe work;

3. Failure of any freight container in any of its load-bearing parts;

4. Plant or equipment coming into contact with overhead power lines;

5. Electrical short circuit or overload causing fire or explosion;

6. Any unintentional explosion, misfire, failure of demolition to cause the intended collapse, projection of material beyond a site boundary, injury caused by an explosion;

7. Accidental release of a biological agent likely to cause severe human illness;

8. Failure of industrial radiography or irradiation equipment to de-energise or return to its safe position after the intended exposure period;

9. Malfunction of breathing apparatus while in use or during testing immediately before use;

10. Failure or endangering of diving equipment, the trapping of a diver, an explosion near a diver, or an uncontrolled ascent;

11. Collapse or partial collapse of a scaffold over five metres high, or erected near water where there could be a risk of drowning after a fall;

12. Unintended collision of a train with any vehicle;

13. Dangerous occurrence at a well (other than a water well);

14. Dangerous occurrence at a pipeline;

15. Failure of any load-bearing fairground equipment, or derailment or unintended collision of cars or trains;

16. A road tanker carrying a dangerous substance overturns, suffers serious damage, catches fire or the substance is released;

17. A dangerous substance being conveyed by road is involved in a fire or released;

The following dangerous occurrences are reportable except in relation to offshore workplaces:

18. Unintended collapse of: any building or structure under construction, alteration or demolition where over five tonnes of material falls; a wall or floor in a place of work; any false-work;

19. Explosion or fire causing suspension of normal work for over 24 hours;

20. Sudden, uncontrolled release in a building of:

  • 100 kg or more of a flammable liquid;
  • 10 kg or more of a flammable liquid above its boiling point; or
  • 10 kg or more of a flammable gas; or
  • 500 kg of these substances if the release is in the open air;

21. Accidental release of any substance which may damage health.


Note;

Additional categories of dangerous occurrences apply to mines, quarries, relevant transport systems (railways etc) and offshore workplaces.

Reportable diseases include:

Certain poisonings; some skin diseases such as occupational dermatitis, skin cancer, chrome ulcer, oil folliculitis/acne; lung diseases including occupational asthma, farmer's lung, pneumoconiosis, asbestosis, mesothelioma; infections such as leptospirosis, hepatitis, tuberculosis, anthrax, legionellosis and tetanus; other conditions such as: occupational cancer, certain musculoskeletal disorders, decompression illness and hand-arm vibration syndrome. The full list of reportable diseases, and the work activities they are related to, can be found in the detailed guide to the Regulations and in the pad of report forms; or simply ring HSE's Info Line to check.

HSE priced and free publications are available by mail order from HSE Books, PO Box 1999, Sudbury, Suffolk C010 2WA. Tel: 01787 881165 Fax: 01787 313995 Website: www.hsebooks.co.uk

(HSE priced publications are also available from bookshops.)

For information about health and safety ring HSE's Info Line Tel: 08701 545500 Fax: 02920 859260 e-mail: hseinformationservices@natbrit.com  or write to HSE Information Services, Caerphilly Business Park, Caerphilly CF83 3GG. You can also visit HSE's website: www.hse.qov.uk

If you are reporting an incident your correspondence should contain the following information;

About you

1                 What is your full name?

2                 What is your job title?

3                 What is you telephone number?

About your organisation

4                 What is the name of your organisation?

5                 The Address, or complete address of Administrator?

6                 Describe the organisation&#x92s activities?

7                 How many people are employed here?

8                 What is the name of the Local Authority?


The SCTA acknowledge the assistance of the Health and Safety Executive in the production of this document.


 
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