Read the latest magazine Health & Safety Industry News ‘Serious Gaps’ Found in Protecting Workers from Excessive Noise 9 September 2025 THREE-QUARTERS of noisy workplaces lack essential knowledge on maintaining hearing protection equipment, recent inspections have found. The Health and Safety Executive’s (HSE) most recent inspection campaign has identified significant failings in workplace hearing protection, uncovering issues with employee training and equipment management. One in four workplaces had noise levels requiring mandatory hearing protection, placing crucial responsibilities on employers to ensure proper provision and management of protective equipment. However, inspections revealed concerning gaps in implementation, HSE says. At high-noise workplaces, more than 75% of employees lacked essential knowledge about storing hearing protection, checking for damage, or reporting equipment faults to employers. Nearly two-thirds (63%) had not received guidance on the critical importance of wearing protection continuously during exposure to harmful noise levels. Training deficiencies were particularly evident, with 80% of employees receiving no instruction on proper wearing techniques, including avoiding interference from hats and hoods, keeping hair clear of earmuffs, or ensuring compatibility with other personal protective equipment such as hard hats and eye protection. Most significantly, 95% of employers had failed to verify whether workers wearing hearing protection could still detect vital warning signals, including fire alarms and vehicle reversing alerts. Protecting Workers from Excessive Noise Chris Steel, HSE’s Principal Specialist Inspector, said: “The gaps that we found in implementation are serious. They place an added risks to workers of excessive exposure to noise when they may believe they are being protected. “If your defence against workplace noise is to give your workers hearing protection then you need to check that it works. How confident are you that the hearing protection you have supplied is in good order, is being worn when it should be, how it should be, and that it is not stopping your workers from hearing warning signals?” To address these issues, HSE is promoting the CUFF checking system to help employers assess hearing protection effectiveness. The acronym covers Condition (equipment integrity), Use (proper deployment when needed), Fit the ear (correct wearing), and Fit for purpose (appropriate specification). Practical advice on implementing effective hearing protection is available here. >> Read more about HSE in the news Previous article Saint-Gobain Reorganises to Strengthen its Construction Chemicals FootprintNext article New Director for the Mastic Asphalt Council Share article You may also like View all News Health & Safety +3 19 March 2026 Construction Firm Fined after Teen Labourer’s Fatal Fall Health & Safety +2 10 March 2026 Site Manager Sentenced for Exposing Workers to ‘Deadly’ Asbestos Risks Health & Safety +2 9 March 2026 Father of Three Electrocuted as MEWP Struck Overhead Powerline Health & Safety +2 6 March 2026 BSIF Campaign Tackles Preventable Work-Related Skin Diseases Sign Up to Roofing Today Stay up to date with all of the latest news from Roofing Today by signing up to our weekly Bulletins… Sign Up Today Get in Touch Check out the latest issue 123 March-April 2026 View Now Past Issues Get in Touch