If you are one of the Employers in Swords, Dublin, and your work involves height, this guide is for you. It sets out your duties and how a Working at Heights Course keeps your Swords site safe and compliant.
Duties of Employers in Swords
You carry the legal duty under the SHWW Act 2005. A Working at Heights Certificate for every worker is your cleanest evidence of compliance. In a Swords workplace that means you should:
- Carry out and record risk assessments
- Provide information, instruction, training and supervision
- Provide a safe place and system of work at height
- Supply suitable, inspected access equipment
Online certification for Swords Employers
Because the Working at Heights Training is delivered online, Employers in Swords and across Dublin can certify without travel or downtime, and download a recognised Working at Heights Certificate the same day.
The Working at Heights Course makes compliance simple
Here is the good news: getting compliant is fast and inexpensive. Our Working at Heights Course is delivered fully online, takes about 45 minutes, and issues a downloadable certificate the same day. It is CPD certified, RoSPA approved and QQI aligned, and it is written specifically for Employers in Swords and across Dublin.
The Working at Heights Training covers the avoid-prevent-minimise hierarchy, ladder and stepladder safety, MEWPs and scaffolds, harnesses and anchor points, and how to carry out a proper risk assessment. Every learner finishes with a recognised Working at Heights Certificate that stands up to HSA inspection and supports your insurance position.
Training that goes beyond the tick-box
Weather turns a routine job into a dangerous one faster than anything else in Ireland. Wind, rain, frost and poor light all raise the risk of Employers in Swords, and the right call is often to stop and reassess rather than push on. Knowing where that line sits is part of being properly trained.
The cheapest control is always to avoid the work at height in the first place. For Employers in Swords, that can mean long-handled tools, lowering the task to ground level, or designing the job so no one needs to climb. Where that is impossible, collective protection such as guardrails and platforms beats personal protection every time.
Frequently asked questions
Do Employers in Swords need Working at Heights Training?
Yes. Any role involved in work at height in Swords needs training. The Working at Heights Course is the recognised route.
Can Employers train online in Swords?
Yes, from anywhere in Swords or Dublin, in about 45 minutes, with a same-day certificate.
More on staying safe at height
Supervision is the quiet control that holds everything together. Even a perfectly trained worker drifts under time pressure, so someone on site needs the knowledge and the authority to stop unsafe work involving employers in Swords before it becomes an incident. That only happens when supervisors are trained too.
The rescue plan is the part most teams forget. If a worker doing employers in Swords falls and is left hanging in a harness, suspension trauma can become life-threatening within minutes. Calling the emergency services is not a rescue plan; having the equipment, the trained people and the method to recover them quickly is. Our Working at Heights Training makes that planning routine.
Falls from height remain one of the leading causes of serious and fatal workplace injury in Ireland, year after year. The pattern is depressingly consistent for employers in Swords: a short task, a familiar setting, a ladder or platform that seemed fine, and a single moment of overreach. Proper training breaks that pattern by making the safe choice the automatic one.
Get certified today
Do not wait for an HSA inspection or a near miss to act. Employers in Swords can complete the Working at Heights Course online in 45 minutes and download a certificate the same day. For 10 or more learners, see our team training rates, or contact our team for a tailored quote.
Start the online Working at Heights Training now and put a recognised certificate in every worker's file before the next job at height begins.