Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Protecting people and planet
Lucion Group
13th September, 2017
To address this situation, the Control of Asbestos at Work Regulations 2012 (CAR 2012) seeks to minimise the risk of harmful effects of exposure to asbestos.
Specifically, Regulation 4 of the CAR 2012) includes an explicit duty for those in control of premises to identify and manage any asbestos present. This responsibility falls to the duty holder, which in many cases is the person or organisation that has clear responsibility for the maintenance or repair of the premises. Depending on the type of school, this can be the local authority, the governing body, owners or trustees.
The duty holder is required to assess and manage the risks from asbestos to employees and others and must ensure that anyone who is likely to work on or disturb, asbestos is provided with information about its location and condition.
To do this, the Regulations require a written asbestos management plan setting out what steps are to be taken to manage any ACMs present in the building. The duty holder must take reasonable steps to find out if there are ACMs in the premises and if so identify how much, where it is and what condition it is in. This is usually done by a person competent in carrying out an asbestos survey, with the results recorded in an asbestos register.
The asbestos management plan needs to be updated regularly and, along with the register, should be made available to anyone visiting or working on a school site.
Government policy considers that asbestos that remains in good condition and is unlikely to be damaged or disturbed is not a significant risk to health as long as it is properly managed. Only when ACMs are disturbed or damaged is the risk of exposure increased through the release of airborne fibres.
Regular inspections and checks by the duty holder of the condition of ACMs are therefore essential and this should include details of any precautionary or safeguarding measures that are needed.
As part of this requires an assessment of the risk associated with each identified occurrence of asbestos in the school is required. The assessment must take into account the type of building material present, the type of asbestos it contains and a priority assessment of the likelihood of someone disturbing the material based on a number of factors.
To help with this task, modern air monitoring and analytical techniques provided by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) provides the means to accurately measure the levels of asbestos fibres present in air samples taken from schools.
SEM’s ability to detect fibre presence to a much lower level than standard technology, and to differentiate asbestos fibres from other types such as those from clothing, means it can effectively be used to properly assess workplace risk and ensure that appropriate remedial action is taken. In this way, periodic air sampling using SEM can provide the reassurance needed that children and teachers are not being exposed to harmful asbestos fibre levels.
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