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The Importance of Site Induction Training

By Martin Sejas

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Published: 06Dec2009
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Before works start in a construction site you need to plan Site Induction Training for all personnel that is going to work on site including your own staff, subcontractors, suppliers and visitors that at same stage will turn up on your construction site.

As an employer you have legal responsibilities to ensure the health and safety of everyone that is going to work in a construction worksite is not compromised, you need to provide awareness of site-specific hazards and risks that could harm them and inform safety rules that need to be obeyed so work related injuries and illnesses is eliminated or minimised. Chapter 8 of the NSW Occupational Health and Safety Regulations 2001 details the need of site-specific training for construction works and similar requirements are stated in other state regulations.

Out of all three OHS training required by the construction industry, the site induction training is the training that is open to diverse interpretation of what should be included when the induction is delivered to the workforce and others that work on site.

The site induction training would vary in content from site to site, from audience to audience ie own work force, truck delivery, subcontractor, visitors, auditors, etc and the level of risks that each activity posses to the workforce.

For a typical worksite the site induction training for all personnel working on site would include briefing on:

* the scope of works and works in progress to date • access and egress to the site, parking areas and traffic routes inside the works compound and worksite
* amenities for the site such as toilets, drinking water,etc
* safety rules for the site
* hazards identified and control measures (for the site) in place eliminate or minimise the risks
* high risk construction activities where safe work procedures apply ie. Excavation, scaffolding, confined spaces, blasting, crane operations, etc.
* first aid arrangements and emergency contact details * emergency procedures including location of the assembly area, emergency exits, fire extinguishers and emergency contact numbers
* personal Protective Equipment required to be worn at the worksite
*site representative on site if any
* employee responsibilities to follow the safety rules and report potential hazards, incidents including near misses

For truck delivery drivers and visitors for example the site inductions would include only some relevant items from the above and visitors generally are not allow walking alone on the worksite, but must be accompanied all the time by someone that has been inducted on the site.

The arrangements for the Site Induction training must be included in your Site safety management plan prepared for your project.

Ensafe Planning Solutions offers a construction safety plan for small and medium sized contractors who do not have the time, money or knowledge to write up their own. It complies with current Australian OHS legislation and can be quickly and easily adapted to any construction work site in Australia.

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