We’ve Changed Our Name: Here’s Why
After a lot of deliberation, we have finally taken the plunge and changed our company name – from Guardian Angel Security to Guardian Angel Safety.
After a lot of deliberation, we have finally taken the plunge and changed our company name – from Guardian Angel Security to Guardian Angel Safety.
Our safety solutions for lone workers in New Zealand and Australia are world-class. They include the Guardian EVERYWHERE hub, our purpose-built enterprise software and intelligent
Earthquakes. Floods. Bushfires. Volcanic eruptions. New Zealand and Australia have had their fair share of natural disasters in recent years and these events simply highlight the importance of mass messaging when your staff are at risk.
As well as lone worker solutions, we’re also passionate about remote worker safety. So, with that hat on, we took particular interest in the abstract in a paper shared by Chris Peace during an NZISM webinar.
Visibility of all your staff, and the ability to mass message them across the whole business, by teams, groups or individual has been a recurring theme for the past couple of years in particular.
Guardian Angel are proud to be sponsoring the Women in Safety Excellence breakfast at the HASANZ conference in Wellington in September. Petra will be delivering a short speech on her H&S business journey, alongside Fiona Ewing from Forestry Safety Council, Amy Richards from Gieson Group and Margret van Schaik from Van Schaik Health and Safety Solutions.
Raising an SOS from wherever you are, and the guarantee of being found fast is 100% achievable and practicable.
The GRWM Regulations, part 2, Guideline 3.1 deal with risks associated with remote or isolated work. It is a PCBU’s responsibility to manage the risk. I think the HSWA guidelines are fairly prescriptive, but as we all know… all the guidelines are fairly open to interpretation, but two things are very clear;
This safety alert highlights the serious health and safety risks that poorly maintained tripod tanks pose for fuel users.
Due to the unauthorised SMS messaging act filtering out SMS messages from provider servers some lone worker SOS messages are not reaching their destination.