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NEWS


HSE AWARDS £1M DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION


CONTRACT Technology consultancy Tisski has been awarded a contract worth over £1m by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) to transform how the regulator provides online services around work-related health, safety and illness.


The two-year project includes the development of Customer Relationship Management (CRM) software that will improve how accounts and resources are accessed and managed by users.


Based on the Microsoft Dynamics 365 platform, the system will also provide self-service facilities, including online payments, as well as providing optimised experiences across desktop and mobile devices.


Phase one of the project commenced in October 2017 and saw the delivery of a new system for HSE’s ‘Ionising Radiation’ service, which is responsible for issuing certificates for premises across the GB to operate electromagnetic rays (such as X-rays and gamma rays) or particles (such as alpha and beta particles).


This needed to be completed ahead of a 3rd January 2018 deadline as the new Ionising Radiations Regulations


the committee meetings, in Port of Spain, Trinidad, in January 2015.


IOSH is providing its members with assistance on finding out about and implementing ISO 45001, including setting up an online hub.


Richard added: “This new standard gives OSH professionals a fantastic opening to transform safety and health and ensure it receives the strategic attention and resources it deserves. IOSH members worldwide have a vital part to play in helping organisations raise their performance, saving lives, supporting livelihoods and securing brighter futures.”


www.iosh.co.uk twitter.com/TomorrowsHS


2017 (IRR17) were introduced. Tisski developed and implemented a new portal which includes functionality for registration, case management and online payment. The system generated new revenues of over £200,000 in its first four weeks of operation, as part of an overall cost recovery model including recouping the consultancy budget required to deliver phase one.


The second phase of the project will see Tisski establish a comprehensive, robust and scalable CRM system that will enable customers to make applications, notify changes or log requests online across many more of the regulator’s key services.


BIM SUPPORTS HEALTH AND SAFETY


ON SITE BSI, the business standards company, has launched a specification for the sharing of health and safety information through a project or asset-life cycle. PAS 1192- 6 ‘Specification for collaborative sharing and use of structured Health and Safety information using BIM’ supports the development of structured health and safety information for all construction projects from the outset.


Until recently, H&S risk management in the construction industry was largely a paper-based discipline. In support of the ongoing digital transformation we continue to witness in the sector, BSI has developed PAS 1192-6 which sets out a model process of how digital health and safety risk information should flow through every stage of a construction project.


PAS 1192-6 was specifically developed to enable users of BIM (Building Information Modelling) methods and techniques to identify, use and share health and safety information in a collaborative way. Doing so will ultimately help to further drive down H&S risks through the lifecycle of a project and built asset.


PAS 1192-6 is relevant to any organization or individual that


Helen Hayes, Head of Digital at HSE, said: “This project marks the start of a significant programme to develop the digital systems that will deliver significant efficiencies for the organisation over the coming years, benefit our service users and ultimately help keep people healthier and safe at work.


We chose to partner with Tisski due to their proven track record in the public sector of delivering Microsoft Dynamics 365 projects on time and to the highest standard and their ability to support our aim to become self-sufficient in managing the Dynamics system over a two-year period,” she continued.


tisski.com


contributes to the design, construction, and maintenance of an asset – including the end of life of an asset. It specifies how H&S information can be used in order to:


• Provide a safer and healthier environment for end-users.


• Mitigate the inherent hazards and risks across the asset lifecycle.


• Result in improved construction H&S performance, fewer incidents and associated impacts.


• Provide for clearer and more relevant H&S information to the right people at the right time.


• Reduce construction and operational costs.


The digital exchange and use of health and safety information is intended to be relevant and support the unique requirements of each individual project, site and built asset. PAS 1192-6 will make it easier to access and share H&S knowledge and guidance already accumulated from prior built environment projects or from elsewhere.


Ant Burd, Head of the Built Environment sector at BSI, said: “Guidance on applying H&S information from the start to the end of life of a project or asset is a win-win for all stakeholders in a built environment project.”


www.bsigroup.com 9


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