HSE targets construction with tougher incident reporting shake-up | Construction Enquirer News
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New RIDDOR rules set to widen reporting net on plant, tunnelling and site safety risks
The review of the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013 signals a step-change for contractors, who face a significant expansion in what must be logged with the regulator. At the heart of the planned reform to RIDDOR reporting is a major tightening of dangerous occurrence rules aimed squarely at construction activity. Tunnelling is being brought firmly into scope, with incidents on works involving tunnels over 1.2m in diameter set to become reportable. Falling objects reporting rules will also be widened beyond lifting operations to capture any unintentional drop from structures under construction or demolition that could cause death — a move that will increase reporting across everyday site operations. Plant safety is another big shift. HSE wants mandatory dangerous occurrence reporting for overturning incidents involving excavators, mobile plant, drill rigs and piling rigs, as site risks come under greater scrutiny. Structural failures are also in the spotlight, with collapses of roofs, ceilings, temporary works and trenches all set to trigger reporting requirements — tightening expectations around temporary works control and ground risk management. Alongside incident reporting, contractors face a broader net on occupational health. HSE is proposing to expand the current list of six reportable diseases by reintroducing nine conditions from earlier rules including asbestosis, silicosis, decompression illness linked to tunnelling and div...