View David Goodenough, West Lothian Council (SWITCH member of Education, Training Competence group) webinar on Lessons learned from delivering waste collection during COVID-19.

In this webinar David takes us through the key stages of delivering a collection service this year as covid 19 restrictions developed including the issues which arose trying to keep a collection service operational and how health, safety and training issues were resolved. Followed by a Q&A session where David shares his knowledge further on some of the issues they faced, how they were resolved and what are the upcoming issues for the remainder of 2020 and going into 2021.

SWITCH will be running a series of webinars which usually take place on the last Thursday of each month on a range of topics and issues relevant to the resource management industry and for everyone working in the sector – so all are welcome to join,

We are always interested in hearing what other topics and subjects you would like to hear more about and discuss and share practice on. Even better if you are able to offer to present on this monthly seminar the please drop and email to admin@switchforum.org.uk.

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Save the date for the November Seminar 

Topic: Promotion of Mental Health and Wellbeing During COVID-19

When: Thursday 26th November 10:00 – 11:00

 

The 5th Annual Health and Safety in Waste and Recycling Conference will take place online this year on Thursday 12th November.

To view the full day programme please click here where you will see there are contributions from WSH, UNITE, HSE, Veolia, Comply Direct and more.

For more information and too book your place please visit the health and safety website 

 

For the latest HSE Weekly Digest please follow the links below.

Topics include:

Please forward this on to any colleagues that you feel will benefit

 

 

 

Thursday 26th November 10:30 – 12:00

Click Here to Register to join the webinar

The theme of this year’s virtual event will be ‘Building Sector Resilience: what 2020 taught us and what happens now’. It will take place as a 90-minute webinar session and will also include an interactive Q&A session with the panellists and an after-event ‘Network roulette’.

The session will look at how COVID-19 has impacted Scotland and its journey toward a circular economy, and what needs to happen to build back better, greener and more resilient than before.

Our panelists will represent government planning, green finance, behaviour change, local authorities and the private sector and will represent an accurate ‘health check’ of the resources sector in Scotland, as well as being able to look forward to Scotland’s green recovery.

Wednesday 11th November 14:00 – 15:00

Click Here to Register to join the webinar

Why this is relevant:
COVID-19 has had a profound effect on every aspect of our lives, from the pattern of business activity, to where we shop and how we socialise. For London waste authorities this impacts how they deliver services. The capital’s local authorities have had to be responsive and adaptive to maintain their domestic and commercial waste and recycling collection services, whilst attempting to forecast the ongoing impact COVID-19 will have – which is particularly important given the likelihood now of a second wave.

About the event:
LWARB is hosting this webinar to share knowledge on three COVID-19 research projects we commissioned to help London local authorities respond to the pandemic. Join us to hear insights on:

• A study to predict the impact of COVID-19 on commercial waste volumes and composition within London;
• Learnings from London waste authorities’ responses to the need to protect waste and recycling services during the March 2020 COVID-19 lockdown; and
• An extension to the waste compositional study conducted as part of the ‘Making recycling work for people in flats’ project, to look at the impact COVID-19 measures have had on waste volumes and composition in purpose built flats.

Although London is the focus of this research, it will be of interest to local authorities elsewhere (particularly those in urban areas), regional and national government, as well as the wider waste industry.

Agenda:

  • Antony Buchan Scene setting
  • Cathy Cook Learnings from waste authorities’ responses to protecting waste and recycling services
  • Sarah Craddock Assessment of the future impact of COVID-19 on commercial waste volumes and composition
  • Gemma Scott Impact of COVID-19 on waste composition in purpose built flats
  • Questions
  • Antony Buchan Summing up

Test and Protect

  • Test and Protect has now been operating for more than four months and is doing what we need it to – identifying positive cases and tracing their close contacts so they can get appropriate public health advice to limit the spread of the virus.
  • It is still essential to continue with other measures to reduce transmission: physical distancing, hand and respiratory hygiene, and appropriate use of face coverings.

Complex cases, including those involving key and emergency service workers, are escalated to experienced teams

  • We cannot offer blanket assurances that certain workforces can be exempt from isolation.
  • If co-workers have been maintaining appropriate physical distancing, then they may have no or few close contacts.
  • If a case is wearing PPE, a risk assessment to assess close contacts is needed.
  • In complex cases, specialist public health advice and management will be required.
  • It is essential that employers carry out a Covid-19 risk assessment to reduce the risk of transmission in the workplace and have robust plans in place to manage the impact of workforce absence due to isolation.

Self-Isolation

  • We currently advise that if someone has been identified as a close contact of a COVID case they have to self-isolate for 14 days. This 14-day period is critical to prevent the virus from spreading because it can take up to 14 days for an infected person to develop the illness (the incubation period). This means that if they get tested and receive a negative result before the 14 days have passed, we cannot be sure that the illness will not develop. If they leave isolation before these 14 days are complete, they could potentially spread the virus in the community.
  • A close contact is defined as a person who, in the infectious period from 48 hours prior to and 10 days after the confirmed case’s symptom onset, or date a positive test was taken if asymptomatic, had at least one of the following types of exposure
  1. Household contact: those who share the household or have spent a significant amount of time in the house without social distancing or This also includes cleaners, even if the index case is not present due to the invasive nature of this job.
  2. Direct contact: close contact outside the house without PPE, of within one metre of index case.
  3. Proximity contact: close contact without PPE for more than 15 minutes between 1 and 2 metres of index case.