Pro Installer February 2015 - Issue 23 | Page 11

11 PRO INSTALLER FEBRUARY 2015 PRO NEWS @proinstaller1 ASBESTOS SAFETY CAMPAIGN GAINS MOMENTUM 20 tradespeople, on average, die every week from asbestos related diseases At the end of 2014, the Glass and Glazing Federation (GGF) fully supported the Health and Safety Executive’s (HSE) Asbestos Campaign to help tradespeople at risk from the dangers of asbestos exposure. Since then the GGF has been delighted to see the Campaign gather momentum with new survey results, new information pages on the HSE website, guidance on training and a free web app. A recent survey commissioned by HSE identified that tradespeople could come into contact with deadly asbestos on average more than 100 times a year. A worrying number did not know when they may actually face the danger, as only 15% of those surveyed knew asbestos could still be found in buildings built up to the year 2000. The survey also revealed some common myths believed by those at risk, with one in seven (14%) believing that drinking a glass of water will help protect them from the deadly dust and one in four (27%) thinking that opening a window will help to keep them safe. The ‘Beware Asbestos’ campaign aims to raise awareness of the real and current risks facing today’s tradespeople. It also seeks to help them work more safely when doing jobs that might disturb asbestos, to help protect them from harm. The campaign has seen the launch of a new, free web app to help tradespeo- Protect yourself and your workmates with the FREE Beware Asbestos web app now ‘Asbestos is still a very real danger and the survey findings suggest that the people who come into contact with it regularly often don’t know where it could be and worryingly don’t know how to deal with it correctly’ ple easily identify where they could come into contact with asbestos as they go about their day-to-day work. The web app leads tradespeople through a list of simple multiple-choice questions about the type of building they are working in, the job that they’re doing, and the type of asbestos containing material they are working on. Depending on their answers, they will be: • told to stop work and get a licensed asbestos contractor if the asbestos risk is too high; • taken to a simple how-to guide giving them easy to follow step-by-step information for small, non-licensed tasks; • told if there is no asbestos risk and so they are safe to continue work. The web app also directs the user to HSE’s new asbestos pages for trades- people, where they can find additional guidance on training requirements and further asbestos information at www.hse.gov.uk/asbestos/tradesperson.htm Philip White, HSE’s Chief Inspector for Construction, said: “Asbestos is still a very real danger and the survey findings suggest that the people who come into contact with it regularly often don’t know where it could be and worryingly don’t know how to deal with it correctly,