A Carlisle scaffolding firm has been fined £15,000 after an
employee was seriously injured when he fell more than six metres through a roof
light.
Contract Scaffolding Services Limited was prosecuted by the
Health and Safety Executive (HSE) following the incident at a factory in
Dalston, Cumbria, on 22 February 2013.
Carlisle Magistrates’ Court heard the company had been
sub-contracted to fit edge protection around the roof of a building, to allow
its removal ahead of the building’s demolition.
The 23-year-old trainee scaffolder, from Carlisle, who does
not want to be named, was part of a four-strong team carrying out the work. He
was wearing a harness, but this was not clipped onto anything at the time of
the incident.
He was working on the roof and as he tried to walk past one
of his colleagues, he stepped onto a roof light which gave way, causing him to
fall through it.
As he fell, he struck parts of the internal steel structure
of the building, causing severe cuts to his face and head, before hitting the
concrete floor more than six and a half metres below and shattering his knee
cap into 12 pieces. As a result of his injuries, he is no longer able to carry
out manual work.
The court was told that although Contract Scaffolding
Services Ltd had prepared a scaffolding plan, method statement and risk
assessment prior to starting the work, it did not mention the presence of the
fragile roof lights.
The scaffolding plan stated that workers would initially
work from a cherry picker or scissor lift and that once a single handrail was
installed they would gain access onto the roof.
This would prevent falls from the edge but offered no
protection from a fall through the roof lights, which ran at four metre
intervals and left less than half a metre of usable space where the scaffolders
were working.
The plan made no mention of the need to wear a harness when
working on the roof and the court heard that although the injured worker was
issued with a harness, at five feet the lanyard was so long that even if it had
been clipped onto the scaffolding it would not have stopped him falling through
the roof lights due to their position.
Contract Scaffolding Services Limited, of Carleton Depot,
London Road, Carlisle, was fined £15,000 and ordered to pay £920 costs after
pleading guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc
Act 1974 and Regulation 9(1) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005 on 18 June
2014.
NEBOSH
Certificate in Construction Health & Safety (8th September
York book
now)
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