INSTRUCTORS WANTED

Any ITSSAR Instructors looking for work, please contact the office on 0113 2527689 or email admin@qtsuk.com

WE CAN CARRY OUT THE FOLLOWING COURSES ON OUR SITE AT MORLEY, LEEDS

Workplace Transport Group B – B1 Counterbalance Forklift Truck – Up to 5 Tonne Lifting Capacity

Workplace Transport Group D – D1 Reach Lift Truck 3 – 8m

Workplace Transport Group A – A1 – A5 Pedestrian walk with and ride on trucks together with stacking

Overhead Gantry Crane

Abrasive Wheels

Safe Use of Harness

Ladder Safety

Manual Handling

Slinger Banksman

Tower Scaffold

Work at Height

Frequently Asked Questions

1. How long does my “Licence” last for?

There is no specific time period after which you need to provide refresher training or formal assessment. However, you may decide that automatic refresher training or a retest after a set period (for example 3-5 years) is the best way to make sure employees remain competent. Where you adopt this approach, you will still need to monitor performance, in case operators need extra training before the set period ends.

2. How old do you have to be to operate a Lift Truck?

Lift truck operators should be over the minimum school leaving age (MSLA), except in ports where they must be at least 18 years old.

There are particular definitions of people by age in health and safety law:

  • a young person is anyone under eighteen years of age;
  • a child is anyone who is not over compulsory school age (i.e. he or she has not yet reached the official age at which they may leave school). This is generally referred to as the minimum school leaving age.
    The Management Regulations 1999 require you to assess the health and safety risks to all your employees and to identify what you need to do to comply with your legal duties to prevent or control those risks and ensure your employees’ health and safety. Under the Regulations you have particular responsibilities towards young people:
  • to assess risks to all young people under 18 years of age, before they start work;
  • to ensure your risk assessment takes into account their psychological or physical immaturity, inexperience, and lack of awareness of existing or potential risks;
  • to introduce control measures to eliminate or minimise the risks, so far as is reasonably practicable.