A Lancashire house builder and its sole director have been
fined for safety failings following two serious incidents at a new-build
development in South Wales.
In the first incident, on 9 August 2011, self-employed
bricklayer Daniel King, then aged 22, of Loughor, West Wales, injured his back
and left foot when he fell almost four metres from a poorly constructed
scaffold that was overloaded and posed a clear fall risk.
Six months later, in March 2012, a contractor was spotted
working at height in the elevated bucket of an excavator in clear view of the
company director.
Both incidents occurred at the same plot within a site at
Cae Canol, Baglan, near Port Talbot, where Blackburn-based Paddle Ltd has been
building new homes as part of a phased development over several years.
The company and its director, Derek Hugh Barnes, were
prosecuted today (19 July 2013) after an investigation by the Health and Safety
Executive (HSE) identified a blatant disregard for worker safety.
Swansea Crown Court heard that the scaffold that Mr King
fell from was in very poor condition and was missing vital guard rails, toe
boards and other fall protection measures.
HSE inspectors checked the structure three days after the
fall, once the bricklayer had reported the incident, and found it was also
being used to take loads of bricks and blocks that it was simply not fit to
carry. There was no evidence to suggest that it had been designed, erected and
inspected by a competent person - as the law requires. Nor was there evidence
that measures had been put in place to reduce the risk of a fall inwards into
the building under construction.
In relation to the second incident, the court was told that
Derek Barnes was fully aware that a worker for his company was using an
excavator bucket to work at height.
The dangerous practice was witnessed by a concerned
householder who photographed and reported the activity to HSE. Mr Barnes was
captured watching nearby, and had clearly consented to the machine being
misused in this way.
Corporate Risk Systems commented “If only the employer -
Paddle Limited had arranged for their employees to be fully trained NEBOSH
Certificate in Construction Health & Safety they could have saved
themselves the £66,000 for a cost of around £2000 for the training course”.
Derek Hugh Barnes, of the same address, was sentenced to
eight months imprisonment suspended for two years, disqualified from acting as
a company director of three years and fined £32,000 with £11,000 costs for
pleading guilty to breaching Section 37 of the Health and Safety at Work etc.
Act 1974.
After the hearing HSE Inspector Phil Nicolle said:
"Paddle Ltd and Derek Barnes have, over the years,
shown a blatant disregard for health and safety management on their
construction sites, as was clearly evident when we investigated the Baglan
incidents.
"Worker safety was clearly compromised on both
occasions and the failings we identified are textbook examples of why falls
from height remain such a common problem in the construction industry.
"Companies
and directors have clear duties of care and safety responsibilities, and it
is vital they properly assess, manage and supervise all work activity to
mitigate risks at all times." Contact us at rs@crsrisk.com
and find out more about our IOSH Directing Safely
Course and The Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 or
visit www.crsrisk.com
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