Health & Safety Law
What you should know
- Your health, safety and welfare at work are protected by
law.
- Your employer has a duty to protect you and keep you informed
about health and safety.
- You have a responsibility to look after yourself and
others.
If there is a problem, discuss it with your employer or safety
representative, if there is one.
This page is a brief guide to health and safety law. It does not
describe the law in detail, but it does list the key points.
Your employer has a duty under the law to ensure, so far as is
reasonably practicable, your health, safety and welfare at
work.
Your employer must consult you or your safety representative on
matters relating to your health and safety at work, including:
- any change which may substantially affect your health and
safety at work, eg in procedures, equipment or ways of
working;
- the employer’s arrangements for getting competent people to
help him/her satisfy health and safety laws;
- the information you have to be given on the likely risks and
dangers arising from your work, measures to reduce or get rid of
these risks and what you should do if you have to deal with a risk
or danger;
- the planning of health and safety; and
- the health and safety consequences of introducing new
technology.
- In general, your employer's duties include:
- making your workplace safe and without risks to health;
- ensuring plant and machinery are safe and that safe systems of
work are set and followed;
- ensuring articles and substances are moved, stored and used
safely:
- providing adequate welfare facilities;
- giving you the information, instruction, training and
supervision necessary for your health and safety.
In particular, your employer must:
- assess the risks to your health and safety;
- make arrangements for implementing the health and safety
measures identified as being necessary by the assessment;
- if there are five or more employees, record the significant
findings of the risk assessment and the arrangements for health and
safety measures;
- if there are five or more employees, draw up a health and
safety policy statement, including the health and safety
organisation and arrangements in force, and bring it to your
attention;
- appoint someone competent to assist with health and safety
responsibilities, and consult you or your safety representative
about this appointment;
- co-operate on health and safety with other employers sharing
the same workplace;
- set up emergency procedures;
- provide adequate first-aid facilities;
- make sure that the workplace satisfies health, safety and
welfare requirements, eg. for ventilation, temperature, lighting,
and sanitary, washing and rest facilities;
- make sure that work equipment is suitable for its intended use,
so far as health and safety is concerned, and that it is properly
maintained and used;
- prevent or adequately control exposure to substances which may
damage your health;
- take precautions against danger from flammable or explosive
hazards, electrical equipment, noise and radiation;
- avoid hazardous manual handling operations, and where they
cannot be avoided, reduce the risk of injury;
- provide health surveillance as appropriate;
- provide free any protective clothing or equipment, where risks
are not adequately controlled by other means;
- ensure that appropriate safety signs are provided and
maintained;
- report certain injuries, diseases and dangerous occurrences to
the appropriate health and safety enforcing authority (see box
below for who this is).
As an employee you have legal duties too. They include:
- taking reasonable care for your own health and safety and that
of others who may be affected by what you do or do not do;
- co-operating with your employer on health and safety;
- correctly using work items provided by your employer, including
personal protective equipment, in accordance with training or
instructions; and
- not interfering with or misusing anything provided for your
health, safety or welfare.
If you have a problem
If you think there is a health and safety problem in your
workplace you should first discuss it with your employer,
supervisor or manager.
You may also wish to discuss it with your safety representative,
if there is one. You, your employer or your safety representative
can get information on health and safety in confidence by calling
HSE’s Infoline telephone service on 0845 345 0055.
If you think your employer is exposing you to risks or is not
carrying out legal duties, and you have pointed this out without
getting a satisfactory answer, you can contact the enforcing
authority for health and safety in your workplace. Health and
safety inspectors can give advice on how to comply with the law.
They also have powers to enforce it. HSE’s Employment Medical
Advisory Service can give advice on health at work. Your employer
can give you their names and addresses.
You can get advice on general fire precautions etc from the Fire
Brigade or your Fire Officer.
Contact Environmental Health
E-mail: envhealth@dover.gov.uk