While dismantling our old Covid systems, I looked at going back to the legacy sign in sheet at the front office desk. But I began to wonder why we had one? The old sheet listed 'health and safety reasons' for making everyone sign in.
But it's not needed for fire safety - the wardens make sure the building is clear.
I can't find any other regulation that requires it.
Visitors are visiting someone, and so are supervised.
We induct any contractors on a separate form. — Garth Forsberg
If the "legacy sign in sheet" was part of your "old Covid systems" then the original purpose was contact tracing during the early days of the pandemic in NZ. It may be that the sign in sheet could have been not well designed. Usually due to the person not having sufficient knowledge or information to design the form. Also the construction industry benchmark SiteSafe has muddied the waters
using the terminology Sign-in Register
No doubt others can/will provide the specific legislation requiring paper based forms for contact tracing. I'm comfortable listening to how tracing people who were close to a Covid positive person has relevance to "making everyone sign in" for "'health and safety reasons'".
I'm interested how using only "fire safety" as the sole indicator of ensuring a building is evacuated is relevant to all the reasons for ensuring a building is evacuated. Some other reasons include tsunamis, building collapses, volcanic eruptions. How would your "wardens make sure the building is clear"? What if it is not possible for wardens to access some areas? Do wardens know who is in the building? What if wardens do not want to put their lives at risk?
"I can't find any other regulation that requires it." I can't find any legislation that requires wardens to "make sure the building is clear".
"Visitors are visiting someone, and so are supervised." Really! Even when they go to the toilet?
"We induct any contractors on a separate form." Inductions have little relevance to physical presence in a building. Generally the PCBU providing the form has a perception that somehow a signature will provide some form of protection.
And secondly, why have a sign in sheet for a construction site and make the crew and contractors sign in every day? Visitors to the site should sign in, as part of their induction. But should workers who have been inducted and are there all the time sign in? I've seen some sites that do this, but want to find out if there's a valid reason for the requirement. — Garth Forsberg
"why have a sign in sheet for a construction site and make the crew and contractors sign in every day?" Try this from
Health & Safety Documents:
'Your signing in book should be used to identify whether all persons have safely evacuated the site in the event of an emergency, for example if there’s a fire.' Remember, a fire is only one reason to evacuate a site.
"Visitors to the site should sign in, as part of their induction." An induction is usually only done once. When does a visitor need to sign in? What happens if a visitor returns on another occasion? Does this require another induction?
"But should workers who have been inducted and are there all the time sign in?" As above:
'Your signing in book should be used to identify whether all persons have safely evacuated the site in the event of an emergency, for example if there’s a fire.'
Garth, you raise some good discussion points.
Generally I've found H&S has a reputation based on poor knowledge, the wants of people divorced from the activity, non existent worker engagement, lackadaisical planning methods and an over inflated perception of roles.
Just my 20 cents worth this time.