The British Woodworking Federation Group

Revised CDM Regs to come into force on Friday 6 April 2015

Back To All Latest News
Posted By
site_admin
06/01/2015

Revised CDM Regs to come into force on Friday 6 April 2015The revised Construction (Design and Management) Regulations will affect the roles and responsibilities of companies and clients involved in construction projects across England, Scotland and Wales. Companies will have to comply with the regulations from 6 April, however enforcement action is unlikely to be taken until April 6th 2016.

The main changes, outlined in general by the Health & Safety Executive, are as follows:

1. Significant structural simplification of the Regulations

2. Replacing the Approved Code of Practice (ACoP) with targeted guidance for the five duty-holders: clients, designers, principal designers, contractors and principal contractors

3. Replacing the CDM coordinator role with the new role of ‘Principal Designer’

4. Replacing explicit requirement for individual competence with a need to have appropriate information, instruction, training and supervision to work safely. Note that the final wording of the Regulations is likely to focus upon skills, knowledge, training and experience of individual workers.

5. Remove domestic client exemption but those duties fall to contractor or Principal Contractor where more than one (in effect, this places legal obligations on house-holders who are having even minor construction work done on their homes e.g. a bathroom refurbishment)

6. HSE notification level changes:
2007: 30 days or 500 person days
2015: 30 days and more than 20 workers simultaneously

Draft industry guides have been produced for the five duty holders under the CDM Regulations 2015 as well as workers. The guidance answers FAQs such as 'Who is a designer?' and can be used to assist clients in detemining their roles under the forthcoming rules. You can find them here:

Clients
Designers
Principal Designers
Principal Contractors
Contractors
Workers

The changes have been put forward by the HSE following research revealing that the construction industry views the (2007) CDM Regulations as being too bureaucratic, the  pre-construction phase was not working as well as many had hoped and the current CDM Regs did not adequately reflect the requirements of the Temporary and Mobile Construction sites directive.

How does this affect construction companies?

• Employers will need to provide information, instruction, training and supervision, with workers having their training needs assessed against the needs of the job and employers to meet the gap in skills knowledge through appropriate training

• A principal designer and principal contractor role will replace the CDM Coordinator role. The CDM Regs have always required safety to be part of the initial planning of the project at design stage. Some designers have not taken full responsibility for this duty, leaving this to someone generally not part of the initial team, as was often the case, with the CDM Coordinator.

The HS&E Test, taken by more than 500,000 people a year, will be refreshed and updated to reflect the new CDM Regs.

Other core HS&E publications, including the  GE700 Construction Site Safety and all NCC and Site Safety Plus courses, such as the Site Safety Plus site manager safety training scheme (SMSTS) and the site supervisions safety training scheme (SSSTS), will also be updated.

What will this mean for domestic clients – homeowners?

For the first time, the revised CDM Regs will apply to domestic clients (homeowners), although these duties can be done by the contractor or principal contractor, or if the client makes a specific appointment, the designer.

• All building and renovation work shown in property development programmes will be covered by the revised CDM Regs, as these are likely to involve more than one contractor

• Written construction phase plans for all construction projects and a principal designer and principal contractor appointed when there is more than one contractor on a project.

The full responsibilities of each key duty-holder, as defined by the regulations, is explained in CITB’s Industry Guidance documents

Posted By
site_admin
Member of Construction Products Association
National Specialist Contractors Council
Passive Fire Protection Federation
CITB
The Alliance for Sustainable Building Products