A building firm and its owner were sentenced on 3 February 2015 at
Preston Crown Court, following an incident in 2011 where a man died as a
result of falling through a roof.
Peter Mawson Ltd, a building
and joining firm, pleaded guilty in December to ‘corporate manslaughter’
and a breach of the Health and Safety at Work Act by failing to ensure
the safety of employees. The company was fined £200,000 for the
corporate manslaughter offence, and £20,000 for the Health and Safety
breach.
Peter Mawson, owner of the company, also pleaded guilty to
a breach of the same act and was sentenced today to: eight months in
prison, suspended for two years; 200 hours unpaid work; a publicity
order to advertise what happened on the company website for a set period
of time, and to take out a half page spread in the local newspaper; and
pay costs of £31,504.77.
At around 3:15pm on Tuesday 25 October
2011 emergency services attended West Cumberland Farmers LTD, Lindal,
Ulverston, following a report that a man had fallen through a roof. The
man, 42 year old Jason Pennington, had been working on the roof and had
fallen through the skylight from a height of approximately 7.6 meters
onto a concrete floor. He was taken to Furness General Hospital where he
died a short time later.
DS Paul Yates for Cumbria Constabulary said:
“This
has been a long and complex investigation, and we have worked closely
with the Health and Safety Executive to establish what happened on that
tragic day. I hope that this case serves as a warning to other
businesses in Cumbria that health and safety measures are extremely
important, and if not implemented correctly can result in devastating
consequences.
“Our thoughts remain with the family of Mr
Pennington at this difficult time. Hopefully the sentencing today will
provide some sort of closure, and they can be left to grieve in peace.”
Chris Hatton, the investigating inspector at HSE, added:
“Jason
tragically lost his life because the company that employed him did
nothing to make sure he was safe while he worked on a fragile roof.
“Peter
Mawson knew the clear panels on the roof weren’t safe to walk on but
neither he nor his company provided any equipment to prevent workers
falling to their death. If scaffolding or netting had been fitted under
the fragile panels, or covers had been fitted over them, then Jason
would still be here today.” IOSH Directing Safely
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