Competences for Core Criteria for demonstration
of Competence: Companies, Contractors, Co-ordinators and Designers
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
The tables
below should help to understand and assess the standards you are required to
meet the standards set out in the core
criteria table below. 
·       
Column 1 of the table lists the elements which should be
assessed when establishing whether
or not a company is competent for the
work which they will be expected to do. 
·       
Column 2 lists the standards against which the assessment
should be made. 
·        Column 3 gives some examples of how a company might demonstrate that it meets these standards.
Companies do not have to produce all of the evidence
listed in column 3 to satisfy the
standard – but they need
to produce enough evidence to show that they meet the standard in column 2, taking account of the nature of the project and the risks which the work
entails. This requires you to make a
judgement as to whether the evidence
provided meets the standard to be
achieved.
If your
judgement is reasonable, and clearly based
on the evidence you have
asked for and been provided with, you
will not be criticised if the company you appoint subsequently proves
not to be competent when carrying out the work.
The assessments should focus on the needs of the
particular job and should be
proportionate to the risks arising from the work. Unnecessary bureaucracy associated with competency assessment obscures the real issues and diverts effort away from them.
If you’re an employer with less than 5 persons
working for you, you do not have to write down your policy, organisation or arrangements under criteria 1 and 2. However, you do need to demonstrate
that your policy and arrangements are adequate in relation to the type of work you do. Assessments of competence will be made easier if your
procedures are clear and accessible.
‘Contractor’,
‘Designer’ and ‘Co-ordinator’ relate to your function, not to the type of organisation.
| 
Criteria | 
Standard to
  be achieved | 
Examples of the evidence that you
  could use to demonstrate you meet
  the required standard | |
| 
Stage 1 assessment | |||
| 
1 | 
Health and
  safety policy and organisation for health and safety | 
You are
  expected to have and implement an appropriate policy, regularly reviewed, and
  signed off by the managing director
  or equivalent. 
The policy
  must be relevant to the nature and scale of your work and set out the
  responsibilities for health and safety management at all levels within the organisation. | 
A signed,
  current copy of the company policy
  (indicating when it was last reviewed and by whose authority it is published). 
Guidance on
  writing company policies for health and safety can be found in HSE free
  leaflet INDG 259. | 
| 
2 | 
Arrangements | 
These should
  set out the arrangements for health and safety management within the
  organisation and should be relevant to the nature and scale of your work.
  They should set out how the company will discharge their duties under CDM
  (2007). There should be a clear indication of how these arrangements are
  communicated to the workforce. | 
A clear
  explanation of the arrangements which the company has made for
  putting its policy into effect and for discharging its duties under CDM (2007). 
Guidance on
  making arrangements for the management of health and safety can be found in
  HSE free leaflet INDG 259. | 
| 
3 | 
Competent
  advice – corporate and construction related | 
Your
  organisation, and your employees,
  must have ready access to competent health and safety advice, preferably from within your own organisation. 
The advisor
  must be able to provide general health and safety advice, and also (from the
  same source or elsewhere) advice relating to construction health and safety
  issues. | 
Name and
  competency details of the source of
  advice, e.g. a safety group, trade federation, or consultant who provides health and safety information and advice. 
An example from the last 12 months of advice given and action taken. | 
| 
Criteria | 
Standard to
  be achieved | 
Examples of the evidence that you
  could use to demonstrate you meet
  the required standard | |
| 
4 | 
Training and
  information | 
You should
  have in place, and implement, training arrangements to ensure your employees
  have the skills and understanding necessary to discharge their duties as
  contractors, designers or CDM co-ordinators. You should have in place a
  programme for refresher training, e.g. a Continuing Professional Development programme or lifelong learning which
  will keep your employees updated on new developments and changes to
  legislation or good health and
  safety practice. This applies throughout the organisation – from Board or equivalent, to trainees. | 
Headline
  training records. 
Evidence of a
  health and safety training culture including
  records, certificates of attendance and adequate health and safety
  induction training for site based workforce. 
Evidence of an active CPD programme. Sample ‘tool
  box talks’. | 
| 
5 | 
Individual
  qualifications and experience | 
Employees are
  expected to have the appropriate qualifications and experience for the
  assigned tasks, unless they are under controlled and competent supervision. | 
Details of
  qualifications and/or experience of specific corporate post
  holders, e.g. Board members, Health
  and Safety Adviser etc. 
Other key
  roles should be named or identified
  and details of relevant qualifications and
  experience provided. 
FOR
  CONTRACTORS: details of number/percentage of people engaged in the project that
  have passed a construction health and safety assessment, e.g. the Construction Skills’ health and safety test or affiliated schemes, or the CCNSG
  equivalent. 
For site managers, details of any specific training, such as Construction
  Skills’ Site Managers Safety Training Scheme
  certificate (SMSTS) or equivalent. 
For
  professionals, details of qualifications
  and/or professional institution membership. 
For site
  workers, details of any relevant
  qualifications or training such as
  S/NVQ certificates. 
Evidence of a
  company-based training programme
  suitable for the work to be carried out. | 
| 
Criteria | 
Standard to
  be achieved | 
Examples of the evidence that you
  could use to demonstrate you meet
  the required standard | |
| 
7 | 
Workforce
  involvement | 
You should
  have, and implement, an established means of consulting with your workforce
  on health and safety matters. | 
Evidence showing how consultation is carried
  out. Names of appointed safety
  representatives. 
For those
  employing more than five people, be able to describe how you consult with
  your employees to achieve the
  consultation required. | 
| 
8 | 
Accident
  reporting and enforcement action; follow up investigation | 
You should have
  records of all RIDDOR reportable events for at least the last three years.
  You should also have in place a system for reviewing all incidents, and
  recording the action taken as a result. 
You should
  record any enforcement action taken against your company over the last five
  years, and the action which you have taken to remedy matters subject to
  enforcement action. | 
Evidence
  showing the way in which you record and investigate accidents and incidents. 
Records of
  the last two accidents/incidents and the actions taken to prevent recurrence. 
Records of
  any enforcement action taken over
  the last five years, and what action was taken to put matters right.
  (Information on enforcement taken by HSE over the last five years is available
  on the HSE website.) 
For larger
  companies, simple statistics showing incidence rates of major injuries, over
  three-day injuries, reportable cases
  of ill-health and dangerous occurrences for the last three years. 
Records
  should include any incidents that occurred whilst the company traded under a
  different name, and any incidents
  that occur to direct employees or labour-only subcontractors. | 
| 
Criteria | 
Standard to
  be achieved | 
Examples of the evidence that you
  could use to demonstrate you meet
  the required standard | |
| 
9 | 
Subcontracting/
  consulting procedures (if applicable) | 
You should
  have arrangements in place for appointing competent subcontractors/
  consultants. 
You should be
  able to demonstrate how you ensure that subcontractors will also have
  arrangements for appointing competent subcontractors or consultants. 
You should
  have arrangements for monitoring subcontractor performance. | 
Evidence showing how you ensure subcontractors
  are competent. Examples of subcontractor assessments
  you have carried out. 
Evidence
  showing how you require similar
  standards of competence assessment from subcontractors. 
Evidence
  showing how you monitor
  subcontractor performance. | 
| 
10 | 
Hazard elimination and risk control (Designers
  only) | 
You should
  have, and implement, arrangements for meeting your duties under Regulation 11 of CDM (2007) | 
Evidence
  showing how you: 
•      ensure co-operation and co-ordination of design work within the design
  team and with other
  designers/contractors 
•      ensure that hazards are eliminated and any remaining risks controlled 
•      ensure that any structure which will be used as a workplace will meet
  relevant requirements of The Workplace (Health Safety and Welfare)
  Regulations 1992. 
Examples
  showing how risk was reduced through design. 
A short summary of how changes to
  designs will be managed. (Note: the emphasis here should be on practical measures which 
reduce
  particular risks arising from the
  design, not on lengthy procedural documentation highlighting generic risks.) | 
| 
Criteria | 
Standard to
  be achieved | 
Examples of the evidence that you
  could use to demonstrate you meet
  the required standard | |
| 
11 | 
Risk assessment leading to a safe method of work (Contractors only) | 
You should
  have procedures in place for carrying out risk assessments and for developing
  and implementing safe systems of
  work/method statements. | 
Evidence
  showing how the company will identify significant health and safety risks and how they
  will be controlled. 
Sample risk
  assessments or safe systems of work or method statements. 
If you employ
  less than five persons and do not have written arrangements, you should be
  able to describe how you achieve
  the above. | 
| 
The
  identification of health issues is
  expected to feature prominently in
  this system. | 
This will depend
  upon the nature of the work, but must reflect the importance of this risk
  area. | ||
| 
12 | 
Co-operating
  with others and 
co-ordinating your work with that of other
  contractors (Contractors) | 
You should be
  able to illustrate how co-operation and co-ordination of your work is achieved in practice, and how you involve the
  workforce in drawing up method statements/safe
  systems of work. | 
Evidence
  could include sample risk assessments, procedural arrangements, and project
  team meeting notes. 
Evidence of
  how the company co-ordinates its
  work with other trades. | 
| 
13 | 
Welfare
  provision 
(Contractors) | 
You should be
  able to demonstrate how you will ensure that appropriate welfare facilities
  will be in place before people start work on site. | 
Evidence
  could include for example health and safety policy commitment; contracts with
  welfare facility providers; details of type of welfare facilities provided on previous projects. | 
| 
14 | 
CDM
  co-ordinator’s duties 
(CDM 
co-ordinators) | 
You should be
  able to demonstrate how you go about encouraging co-operation, co-ordination
  and communication between designers. | 
The evidence
  should be in the form of actual
  examples rather than by generic procedures. | 
| 
Criteria | 
Standard to
  be achieved | 
Examples of the evidence that you could
  use to demonstrate you meet the
  required standard | |
| 
Stage 2
  assessment | |||
| 
1 | 
Work
  experience | 
You should give details of
  relevant experience in the field
  of work for which you are applying. | 
A simple
  record of recent projects or
  contracts should be kept, with the phone numbers and addresses of contacts
  who can verify that work was carried out with due regard to health and
  safety. 
This should
  be sufficient to demonstrate your ability to deal with the key health
  and safety issues arising from the work you are applying for. 
Where there
  are significant shortfalls in your
  previous experience, or there are risks associated with the
  project which you have
  not managed before, an explanation of
  how these shortcomings will be
  overcome. | 
Guidance for
assessing competence of a
co-ordinator for a larger or
more complex project, or one with high or unusual risks.
Organisations do not have to produce all of the evidence
listed in column 3 to satisfy the
standard – they simply need to produce enough evidence to show that they meet the standard in column 2, taking account of the nature of the project and the risks which the work entails. This requires you to make a
judgement as to whether the evidence provided meets the standard to be achieved. 
If your judgement is reasonable, and clearly based on the evidence provided, you will not be criticised if the company you appoint subsequently proves not to be competent to carry out the work.
If your judgement is reasonable, and clearly based on the evidence provided, you will not be criticised if the company you appoint subsequently proves not to be competent to carry out the work.
Remember that
assessments should focus on the
needs of the particular job and should
be proportionate to the risks arising from the work.
Unnecessary
bureaucracy associated with competency
assessment obscures the real issues
and diverts effort away from them.
| 
Element | 
Sub-element | 
Examples of attainment | 
| 
Stage 1 | ||
| 
Task knowledge appropriate for the tasks to be
  undertaken. May be technical or managerial. | 
The design
  process | 
Professionally Qualified to Chartered level (Note
  1) 
Membership of a relevant construction institution,
  for example CIBSE; ICE;
  IET; IMechE; IstructE; RIBA;
  CIAT. | 
| 
Health and
  safety knowledge sufficient to perform the task safely, by identifying hazard and evaluating the risk in order
  to protect self and others, and to appreciate general background. | 
Health and safety
  in construction | 
Validated CPD
  in this field (Note 2), and typical
  additional qualification e.g. NEBOSH Construction Certificate 
Member of the
  Health and Safety Register
  administered by the ICE (Note
  3) 
Member of the
  Co-ordinators’ Register administered by the Association for Project
  Safety 
Fellowship of Association for Project Safety 
Membership of Institution of Planning Supervisors. | 
| 
Stage 2 | ||
| 
Experience and ability sufficient to perform the
  task, including, where appropriate, an appreciation of constructability, to recognise personal limitations,
  task-related faults and errors and to identify appropriate actions. | 
Evidence of
  work on similar projects with comparable
  hazards, complexity and procurement route. | |
Note 1      Chartered membership of a recognised
construction-related institution.
Note 2      For
current professionals this needs to include at least 3 days of appropriate training within the last 2 years, including a general
‘health and safety’ course with a construction bias and/or a specialist ‘co-ordinator’
course.
Note 3      Open to any member of a construction-related institution.
 
 
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