Ad
Tuesday, January 20, 2026

Government plans to scrap Working at Height Regs

ADVERTISEMENT

The Government is planning to scrap the UK’s Work at Height Regulations at the end of 2023 unless ministers in Westminster can be convinced to rescue them.

The Government is poised to scrap the Working at Height Regulations and over 2,400 other laws and regulations at the end of 2023 following the UK leaving the European Union.

The Revocation and Reform Bill which is currently being passed through Parliament seeks to remove EU-derived laws that remain on the UK statute book following Brexit.

The Bill proposes to remove many laws that are entwined with the EU and the Working at Height Regulations is just one of them. Others set for the chop include the Manual Handling Operations Regulations and Personal Protective Equipment at Work Regulations.

Repeal Campaign

Today the Access Industry Forum (AIF) is urging all in the industry to join its campaign to help save the Work at Height Regulations.

The AIF said: “No one was calling for the repeal of the Work at Height Regulations. There was no campaign for reform; no one saying it’s unfit for purpose or burdensome. In fact, guidance has been simplified over the years. There has been no consultation, no parliamentary scrutiny. The issue is simply that they originated from an EU directive, so are being swept up in this mass clear out of regulations – despite extensive UK stakeholder consultation taking place before they were created and being an established UK law for almost two decades.

If the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill passes, the whole lot will automatically be axed on 31 December 2023 unless the government takes action to save individual regulations.”

AIF has submitted written evidence to the House of Commons Public Bill Committee, which is now considering the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill.

It also has united the ten principal trade associations and federations involved in work at height: ATLAS, EPF, FASET, IPAF, IRATA, Ladder Association, NASC, PASMA, SAEMA and WAHSA.

Support the Campaign

The AIF is asking many in our sector to urgently write to their MP to ask them to push for the Work at Height Regulations to be assimilated into UK law and excluded from ‘sunset clauses’ within the EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill.

Chair of the AIF, Peter Bennett OBE said: “Employers don’t want falls from height in their workplaces. They want their workers to be safe and free from harm. They also want to avoid the investigations, negative publicity, delays, increased insurance premiums and upheaval of responding to an accident. The Work at Height Regulations is a compact piece of legislation that creates a useful framework for employers to manage the risks and avoid falls from height.

The rules are straightforward and practical, they’re embedded in existing policies, procedures and training, and although they’re not perfect, the most important thing is that they work. I’m in no doubt that the Work at Height Regulations have saved lives and if this legislation cannot be rescued from the scrapheap, it’s workers who will pay the highest price of all.”

For more information please visit the AIF website.

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest news

AT-PAC Ringlock supports Qatar’s longest zipline installation

AT-PAC Ringlock has been used to support what the project team described as the longest zipline installation ever constructed in Qatar, spanning approximately 200...

Inner City Scaffolding appoints new managing director

Inner City Scaffolding, a London-based scaffolding contractor working across commercial and urban construction projects, has appointed Ben Ramsey as its new managing director. The appointment...

POP UP Products marks 20 years in business

Access equipment manufacturer POP UP Products is marking its 20th anniversary in 2026, with a programme of events planned across the year. The Deeside-based company...

David Brown returns as President and Chair of NASC and CISRS

Redaction notice An earlier version of this article referred to “interim” leadership arrangements at NASC and CISRS. This was incorrect. David Brown has formally resumed the...

The story behind Scaffolder’s Day, and how it became an industry fixture

Each year on 14 January, the scaffolding industry marks Scaffolder’s Day. There is no formal programme, no governing body and no official endorsement. Yet...

Safety & Access adds CITB Site Safety Plus courses

Safety & Access has added CITB Site Safety Plus (SSP) courses to its training portfolio, extending its offer to include site safety and management...

Embrace Building Wraps marks climate milestone with 20,500 trees planted

Embrace Building Wraps has begun 2026 by confirming that it has helped plant more than 20,500 trees as part of a long-running climate commitment...

Scaffolding project manager convicted after temporary bridge collapse

A Finnish court has handed a suspended prison sentence to a scaffolding firm project manager over the collapse of a temporary pedestrian bridge in...

Funeral details confirmed as NASC publishes tribute to Wayne Connolly

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation has published a detailed obituary for its President and Chair, Wayne Connolly, alongside confirmation of funeral arrangements following...

The real value of competition in scaffolding

Anyone who’s ever worked in a management or sales position in scaffolding will tell you that competitors are always on your mind. Perhaps you...

Latest news

ADVERTISEMENT

Magazine

Winter Issue #28 | Past issues >>

Popular

The story behind Scaffolder’s Day, and how it became an industry fixture

Each year on 14 January, the scaffolding industry marks...

Scaffolding project manager convicted after temporary bridge collapse

A Finnish court has handed a suspended prison sentence...

David Brown returns as President and Chair of NASC and CISRS

Redaction notice An earlier version of this article referred to...

Safety & Access adds CITB Site Safety Plus courses

Safety & Access has added CITB Site Safety Plus...

Embrace Building Wraps marks climate milestone with 20,500 trees planted

Embrace Building Wraps has begun 2026 by confirming that...

Related articles

ADVERTISEMENTS

Latest topics

NASC and CISRS to launch new digital platform and mobile app

The National Access & Scaffolding Confederation and the Construction...

AT-PAC Ringlock supports Qatar’s longest zipline installation

AT-PAC Ringlock has been used to support what the...

Inner City Scaffolding appoints new managing director

Inner City Scaffolding, a London-based scaffolding contractor working across...

POP UP Products marks 20 years in business

Access equipment manufacturer POP UP Products is marking its...
ADVERTISEMENTS