Looks like there is a bit of an outcome to this :
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c749gj1ezdko?
My first thoughts are.........
That this is nonsense. It burdens everyone else whilst taking the onus off the operator to do an actual RA (Risk Assesment)?
When we did an NVQ on window cleaning, the instructor told us to write a Risk Assessment for each job we do.
I thought this was going a bit overboard, but if I was the instructor, I would probably say the same.
I know that Gardiner poles have an insulated base section. Would I put my full faith that it will fully protect me from electric shock? No way.
I'm sure that most of us will do a mental assessment of the customer's property when we arrive before we start cleaning. I'm sure that we can all remember a job we rocked up to and then decided that it was best to leave it for another time.
My mental risk assessment would have probably told me that the job is too risky to do, even if I was desperate for the work. I base that on another report of the 'recent' death of a window cleaner who touched power lines with his aluminium pole.
We clean both properties of the first photo I posted on this thread. Our risk assessment says when we have finished cleaning the top windows of the first house, we collapse the pole before moving onto the next property and then extending the pole to clean those top windows. Those power lines to the houses don't carry 33,000 volts; possibly single 230v supply, but I still don't trust my Gardiner pole. I use it carefully as though it had no insulation at all.