Health & Safety

Sureshot can help you with Health and Safety, we have already carried out Health and Safety Assessments for Bureau Veritas, Tarmac and LaFarge. We wrote the SHE papers for the UK explosives qualifications and also operate as Expert Witness both as advisors and in Court.

 

Sureshot recognises and accepts its responsibility as an employer to provide a safe and healthy workplace and work environment for its employees and others ( contractors, visitors, and the public) who may be affected by its work. We undertake to comply with all statutory health and safety requirements.

Sureshot wishes to adopt all other reasonably practicable means to eliminate hazards and reduce the risk of injury to its employees and others (contractors, visitors, and the public) and the risk of damage to its property.

Sureshot will provide sufficient information, instruction, training and supervision to ensure all employees are aware of the hazards at their workplace together with the necessary measures to be taken to protect against these hazards.

Sureshot believes that sensible risk management is about:

Ensuring that workers and the public are properly protected

Providing overall benefit to society by balancing benefits and risks, with a focus on reducing real risks – both those which arise more often and those with serious consequences

Enabling innovation and learning not stifling them

Ensuring that those who create risks manage them responsibly and understand that failure to manage real risks responsibly is likely to lead to robust action

Enabling individuals to understand that as well as the right to protection, they also have to exercise responsibility

CONTACT US AT —

England

tel: + 44 (0) 161 624 2916                  fax: + 44 (0) 161 627 0594

E-mail: info@sureshot-intl.com

South Africa:        

tel:      + 27 11708 2703                        fax:  + 27 11708 2705

E-mail: milequip@iafrica.com

Even with the best available training, accidents still happen. The pictures show one of our dumpers working in Jamaica, the machine was in perfect condition, the operator was fully trained, and had been driving this machine for months. He was under no pressure to hurry but he still decided to overspeed on an incline and rolled the truck. He was not hurt, but badly shocked.