Set up and run a safe mineral products factory
Making glass, ceramics, cement, lime, concrete and stone products is machinery- and dust-intensive, and respirable crystalline silica is …
Whatever sports, amusement or recreation business you operate — a gym, a swimming pool, a theme park, a fairground, an adventure centre or an amusement arcade — you must manage the same workplace health and safety, fire safety, insurance, equality and data protection duties before you open. This guide walks you through each one.
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Sports, amusement and recreation businesses bring the public into gyms, pools, playing fields, amusement parks, fairgrounds and activity centres. Every employer and self-employed person has duties under the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 (HASWA). The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) enforces in Great Britain; the Health and Safety Executive for Northern Ireland (HSENI) enforces in Northern Ireland.
HASWA requires you to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare of your employees and anyone else affected by your work — participants, spectators, visitors and passers-by. You must carry out a suitable and sufficient risk assessment, and if you employ five or more people you must record it in writing. For leisure and entertainment premises, your risk assessment should cover the specific hazards of your activities — equipment, water, heights, crowds and mechanical rides.
The Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005 applies in England and Wales. Scotland has the Fire (Scotland) Act 2005 and the Fire Safety (Scotland) Regulations 2006. Northern Ireland has the Fire and Rescue Services (Northern Ireland) Order 2006 and the Fire Safety Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2010. You are the 'responsible person' for the premises and must carry out a fire risk assessment, maintain escape routes, install fire detection and provide staff training. Sports venues, leisure centres, theme parks and amusement arcades must pay particular attention to crowd capacity, emergency evacuation routes and the management of large numbers of visitors.
If you employ anyone — including part-time staff, seasonal workers, coaches and instructors — you must hold employers' liability insurance with a minimum cover of £5 million and display the certificate (or make it available electronically). The certificate is issued by your insurer, not by HSE. The Employers' Liability (Compulsory Insurance) Act 1969 applies in Great Britain. In Northern Ireland, the equivalent duty is under the Employers' Liability (Defective Equipment and Compulsory Insurance) (Northern Ireland) Order 1972.
The Equality Act 2010 applies in England, Scotland and Wales. It protects participants, spectators, employees and job applicants from discrimination based on nine protected characteristics. As a service provider, you must make reasonable adjustments for disabled people — for example accessible seating at sports grounds, pool hoists or ramps at leisure centres. In Northern Ireland, the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, the Sex Discrimination (Northern Ireland) Order 1976 and the Fair Employment and Treatment (Northern Ireland) Order 1998 provide equivalent protections enforced by the Equality Commission for Northern Ireland (ECNI).
If you hold membership records, booking details, medical questionnaires, safeguarding records, CCTV footage or staff payroll, you process personal data. The UK General Data Protection Regulation (UK GDPR) and the Data Protection Act 2018 apply UK-wide. You must register with the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO) unless exempt, identify a lawful basis for each processing activity, keep data secure and respond to subject access requests within one calendar month. Processing children's data requires particular care — the ICO's Age Appropriate Design Code may apply if you offer online services to under-18s.
If your business serves alcohol, hosts spectator sports, operates a swimming pool, coaches children, runs fairground rides, offers adventure activities or operates gaming machines, follow "Meet your sports, amusement and recreation regulatory duties" for the licensing, certification, safeguarding and safety duties that apply on top of this universal foundation.
Authoritative guidance for sports, amusement and recreation workplace duties.