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RAMS, CPP & Site Documents for Electricians

Stop spending your evenings writing RAMS. Create professional risk assessments, method statements, and CPPs for electrical work in minutes.

No card needed · Used by UK electricians · CDM 2015 compliant

thesitebook.co.uk
Generated RAMS document in The Site Book showing cover page with project details and 48 assessed hazards

Built for Electricians

Real work, real hazards. Here are examples of what The Site Book creates RAMS for:

First fix wiring

Cable routing through timber and steel frames, notching joists, fire stopping at compartment walls — covers cable damage, service strikes, and fire spread risks.

Consumer unit upgrades

Isolation procedures, live testing requirements, asbestos risk in older consumer unit backboards — covers arc flash, electric shock, and asbestos exposure.

Commercial rewires

Phased isolation in occupied buildings, temporary supplies, containment installation at height — covers working at height, live working, and coordination with other trades.

EV charger installations

External cable routing, ground-level excavation for ducting, mounting at height — covers buried services, manual handling of charger units, and wet weather working.

CDM 2015 Compliance for Electricians

CDM 2015 applies to all electrical construction work, including domestic installations, commercial rewires, and industrial maintenance. Electricians may hold the duty of contractor under Regulation 15, or principal contractor under Regulation 13 if they are managing a project with multiple trades. Notifiable electrical work under Part P of the Building Regulations adds a separate compliance layer for domestic installations, but this does not replace CDM duties — both apply simultaneously. Risk assessments must specifically cover electrical isolation procedures, arc flash hazards during live testing, cable routing through occupied spaces, and coordination with other services. BS 7671 (18th Edition Wiring Regulations) sets the technical standard for safe installation, while the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 impose a legal duty to maintain all electrical systems to prevent danger. Every electrical RAMS should reference both standards and detail the safe system of work for isolation, testing, and energisation.

What You Get

Job-specific RAMS

Describe your job and get professional risk assessments covering electric shock and arc flash during live testing and fault finding and other trade-specific hazards.

Construction Phase Plans

CDM 2015 compliant CPPs created from your job description. Covers management arrangements, risk control, welfare, and emergency procedures.

COSHH Assessments

Smart substance search and SDS upload. Pre-loaded with common electrician substances like pvc cement and cable lubricant.

Site Inductions

Digital induction sign-offs for every worker on site. Linked to your CPP and site rules. Works on any phone or tablet.

Worker & subcontractor tracking

Track certifications, insurance, and CSCS cards. Get alerts before documents expire. One view for all your workers.

Digital document sharing

Share your full document pack with clients, principal contractors, or inspectors via a secure read-only link. No login needed on their end.

Common Hazards We Cover

These are the real risks electricians face on site every day. Your RAMS will address each one with specific control measures.

  • Electric shock and arc flash during live testing and fault finding
  • Cable routing through walls and floors — risk of striking hidden services (gas, water, existing cables)
  • Working in confined spaces such as risers, ceiling voids, and plant rooms
  • Asbestos exposure in older buildings — consumer unit backboards, cable trunking routes, ceiling tiles
  • Working at height for containment runs, ceiling fixtures, and external installations
  • Manual handling of cable drums, distribution boards, and heavy switchgear

Key Regulations & Standards

BS 7671 (IET Wiring Regulations) and Electricity at Work Regulations 1989

BS 7671 18th Edition covers safe isolation procedures, circuit protection design, earthing requirements, and RCD selection. The Electricity at Work Regulations 1989 require all electrical systems to be constructed, maintained, and operated to prevent danger — imposing duties on employers and self-employed alike. The Work at Height Regulations 2005 apply to containment runs and ceiling-level installations. The Control of Asbestos Regulations 2012 are relevant for older buildings where cable routes pass through asbestos-containing materials. NICEIC and NAPIT operate as competent person schemes for domestic electrical work under Part P of the Building Regulations.

What's included at each tier

FeatureStarter£0Pro Monthly£39/moPro Annual£30/moBusiness£99/mo
First project free
RAMS generator
PDF download
Worker sign-off
Unlimited projects
CPP generator
COSHH library
Team members
Priority support
Site inductions
Toolbox talks
Multi-site rollout
Save £108/yr vs monthly

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need RAMS as an electrician?
Yes, particularly on commercial sites and when working under a principal contractor. CDM 2015 requires risk assessments for all construction work, and most principal contractors will not let you on site without trade-specific RAMS. Even on domestic work, RAMS demonstrate that you have thought through the risks — especially important for notifiable electrical work under Part P of the Building Regulations.
How long does it take to create RAMS for electrical work?
With The Site Book, under 5 minutes. Describe the job — for example, 'consumer unit upgrade in a 1970s semi' — and the AI generates RAMS covering electrical isolation, live testing, asbestos risk in older properties, and all relevant control measures. Without it, writing RAMS from scratch typically takes 1-2 hours per job.
Does The Site Book cover BS 7671 and Part P requirements?
The Site Book covers the health and safety aspects of electrical work under CDM 2015, including references to BS 7671 safe isolation procedures and the Electricity at Work Regulations 1989. It does not replace your electrical certification (EICRs, minor works certificates) — those are separate compliance documents. What it does is ensure your RAMS and CPP properly address electrical hazards and reference the correct standards.
What should electricians include in a Construction Phase Plan?
Your CPP should cover management arrangements for the electrical installation, emergency procedures for electrical incidents including arc flash and electric shock, coordination requirements with other trades working in the same zones, and isolation procedures for phased work in occupied buildings. Under CDM 2015 Regulation 12, the CPP must be proportionate to the risks — for complex electrical projects, this means detailed sequencing of isolation, testing, and energisation stages.
Do I need COSHH assessments for electrical work?
Yes, for specific substances. PVC cement used for conduit joining, cable lubricant for pulling through containment, lead solder on older installations, and cleaning solvents for switchgear all require COSHH assessment under the Control of Substances Hazardous to Health Regulations 2002. The Site Book generates COSHH assessments that cover exposure routes, control measures, and PPE requirements for these substances.
What CDM duties apply to electrical contractors?
Under CDM 2015 Regulation 15, contractors must plan, manage, and monitor their own work to ensure it is carried out safely. This means providing adequate supervision, ensuring workers have the right competence and training (including 18th Edition certification), not starting work unless welfare facilities are available, and cooperating with the principal contractor on site rules and coordination. If you are the only contractor on a domestic project, you automatically take on additional duties under Regulation 15(8).

Honest pros and cons

Pros

  • RAMS pre-filled with live-working, arc-flash and isolation controls
  • Consumer-unit / EV-charger templates ready to customise
  • Part-P notifiable checker built into the project wizard
  • Worker sign-off on-site with CSCS card photo on file

Cons

  • No 18th Edition inspection & test certificate (EICR) generation yet
  • NICEIC / NAPIT compliance certificate templates still on roadmap
  • CIS-linked payroll / invoicing not shipped — documents only

Why The Site Book

  • Only UK construction compliance tool that ships RAMS + CPP + COSHH + inductions + worker sign-off in one flat-rate subscription.
  • AI-generated documents are site-specific from a natural-language brief, not a template library you hand-fill -cuts writing a RAMS from 2 hours to under 5 minutes.
  • Worker sign-off, PCPP import, cert tracking, and document checking are included at the entry tier, not locked behind an enterprise plan.
  • Transparent flat-rate pricing starting at £30/mo -no per-seat surprise as the team grows.

Ready to stop writing RAMS by hand?

Describe your job, get professional RAMS, CPP, and COSHH assessments in minutes. No credit card required.