- Use mechanical handling aids such as kerb grabs or vacuum lifters for heavy kerbs
- Wear high-visibility clothing to EN ISO 20471 Class 3 when working near live traffic
- Ensure traffic management is in place before starting any kerb laying on highways
- Use water suppression or on-tool extraction when cutting kerbs with a disc cutter
- Wear gloves to protect hands from cement burns and crushing when handling kerbs
- Carry out a manual handling risk assessment and brief the team before each task
- Use team lifts as a minimum where mechanical aids are not available for heavy units
- Wear RPE when cutting kerbs to protect against respirable crystalline silica dust
- Check for buried services before excavating bedding trenches along kerb lines
- Keep the work area clean and free from trip hazards including excess mortar and offcuts
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- DON'T manually lift kerbs over 25 kg alone — use mechanical aids or team lifts
- DON'T work next to live traffic without signed and guarded traffic management in place
- DON'T dry cut kerbs with a disc cutter — silica dust is carcinogenic without suppression
- DON'T handle wet cement mortar with bare hands — it causes serious chemical burns
- DON'T leave kerb offcuts and tripping hazards in pedestrian or vehicle routes
- DON'T kneel on hard surfaces for prolonged periods without knee pads or protection
- DON'T ignore back pain or hand injuries — report symptoms early to prevent worsening
- DON'T excavate bedding trenches without checking for buried services beneath the line
- DON'T stack kerbs too high on pallets where they could topple onto workers nearby
- DON'T work in wet conditions without slip-resistant footwear and appropriate wet weather PPE
See also: Manual Handling Awareness | Handling Kerbs and Paving
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