Now the whad regulations state that you have to do a risk assement before you do a job and if you can clean them windows in any other way which means you don't climb ladders then you must do it.
Actually, it says you should use the safest means at your disposal to do the job.
As I don't own a pole system then I can't do it in any other way, so I am doing it the safest way available to me.
What you're saying is the same as saying "ladders are banned" ::)If I swung from the roof on a rope when I could have used a nice steady ladder, then I'm not using the safest option, hence ignoring laws...
It's typical of wfp'ers to say something like that.
This is what annoys us trad cleaners and started this whole thing.
Rog.
Rog,
If you read the WAHD and it's guidance notes, it states that the guiding principle is that if a task can be completed from the ground; then that's how it should be done.
Full stop.
Nothing to do with 'safest means at your disposal'. I don't mean to be argumentative; but your simply wrong.
Ian Greenwood, Head of the Working at Height Directive Team said on Newnight that ladders aren't banned, but window cleaners MUST consider the alternatives first.
That's not just a wooly statement.
Fred: 'Burt, what the alternatives?'
Burt: 'Dunno, mate, I've just got a ladder. So none really'.
Fred: 'Great, ladders are okay then'.
It just doesn't work like that.
Fortunately, no-one is policing the WAHD so I can and still do use ladders in an inappropriate fashion.
I know when I use a ladder; most - if not all of the time - I'm not complying with the WAHD.
But at least I've actually read the rules, undertand them and I'm man enough to admit that I often don't comply with them also.
It's getting tedious reading 'informed' statements about the WAHD. It's been with us for at least nine months now.
Why not try reading the WAHD.