A Gloucestershire housebuilder and the company’s managing director
have been fined for poor welfare facilities and unsafe excavation work
at a construction site near Cinderford.
The Health and Safety
Executive (HSE) identified a number of concerns at the new-build
development on Hudson Lane, Buckshaft, in December 2013. They included a
lack of hot running water and washing facilities, and an unsupported
excavation for a new sewer.
Local firm K W Bell Group Ltd and MD
Keith Bell, aged 74, both accepted yesterday (26 January) that welfare
and safety standards at the site fell short and the offences had been
committed with the consent, connivance or was attributable to the
neglect of, Keith Bell himself.
Cheltenham Magistrates heard the
firm was building five homes at the site, work that commenced in April
2013 and was overseen by Keith Bell
The sanitation and excavation
failings were found during a site visit on 11 December, although it was
established there had been failures during the entire period of works to
date.
HSE served an Improvement Notice requiring urgent welfare
improvements. A Prohibition Notice was also served to stop any further
excavation work with immediate effect until the excavations were
properly supported.
K W Bell Group Ltd, of Whimsey Industrial
Estate, Steam Mills Road, Cinderford, was fined a total of £4,000 and
ordered to pay £765 in costs after pleading guilty to two separate
breaches of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007.
Keith Bell, of Elton, Gloucestershire was fined £9,000 with £3,502 costs after also pleading guilty to the same breaches.
After the hearing, HSE Inspector Sue Adsett said:
“The
standards I saw at the Hudson Lane development were poor. The
excavation work, in particular, was a major cause for concern because
there was clear evidence of excavation entry without adequate
precautions. The consequences of the sides of the excavation collapsing
on someone could have been devastating, and precautions, such as a
trench box, could have easily been provided mentioned in the company’s
own method statement.
“The welfare failings – no toilet or hand
washing facilities for four months worth of construction work – were
particularly disappointing given previous Improvement Notices served by
HSE on the subject at other sites. Construction workers need access to
hot running water and washing facilities in order to remove potentially
harmful dirt and dust before they eat and drink. It is a clear legal
requirement, and both parties should have known that as experienced
developers.”
NEBOSH Combined General and Construction Course in Health & Safety
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