TRD/Civils/TBT-TRD-007
Steel Fixer Safety
Trade-Specific Safety › Civils › Steel Fixer Safety
Steel Fixer Safety
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-TRD-007 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Steel fixers cut, bend, and tie reinforcement bars (rebar) to form the steel skeleton inside concrete structures.
- The role involves constant manual handling of heavy steel bars weighing 10-40 kg each depending on diameter.
- Rebar impalement is a serious hazard — unprotected vertical bars have caused fatal injuries on UK sites.
- Working on rebar mats at height above ground beams and pile caps creates fall risks.
- Wire tying using hand tools causes repetitive strain injuries to wrists, hands, and forearms.
- Cutting rebar with disc cutters, shears, and benders generates noise, sparks, and sharp off-cuts.
- Burns from bar bending machines, cutting torches, and freshly cut steel ends are common injuries.
- The Manual Handling Operations Regulations 1992 and Work at Height Regulations 2005 both apply.
- Sharp wire ends from tying reinforcement penetrate gloves and cause hand injuries daily.
- Steel fixers must hold a valid CSCS card and be competent in the specific fixing methods used.
Why?
| Impalement risk | Unprotected vertical rebar kills workers who fall onto it — caps must be fitted. |
| Manual handling | Repetitive heavy lifting of rebar causes chronic back and shoulder injuries. |
| Fall hazard | Working on rebar mats above voids or at height creates fall and entrapment risks. |
| Repetitive strain | Wire tying thousands of connections per day damages hands and wrists permanently. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Reinforcement Fixing Safety | Rebar Impalement Prevention |
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