A waste and recycling site in Carmarthen was in such a dangerous
condition that visiting health and safety inspectors had to issue eight
notices to immediately halt a range of work activities, a court has
heard. The site run by Mekatek Ltd at Amex Park, Johnstown was subject
to a routine inspection by Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors
on 20 May 2013 when a number of serious safety issues were discovered,
including access to unguarded dangerous machinery, exposure to risk of
electrocution and areas contaminated by asbestos containing materials.
Mekatek Ltd was prosecuted by HSE at a hearing before Swansea Crown Court on 27 February 2015.
The
court was told the site had a catalogue of dangerous points. Among
these was a “man basket” on a forklift truck to allow workers to carry
out work at height. This basket was not secured to the forks of the
truck and there was no cage behind the basket to stop workers becoming
trapped with the fork lift truck mast.
There were no suitable
guards to prevent workers getting caught in the moving machine parts of a
granulator, two compactors, a shredder and a paint mixing drum, and
electrical cables were found trailing through liquid, leading to a risk
of electrocution.
In addition, exposed and damaged pipe lagging,
which included asbestos containing materials, was in a poor state and
exposed workers at the site to the risk of contamination. This was
allowed to continue by Mekatek despite an earlier report by a specialist
that had identified the presence of asbestos in the area and
recommended its urgent removal.
Mekatek Ltd of Terminus Road,
Sheffield, pleaded guilty to a breach of health and safety regulations, a
single breach of control of asbestos regulations and a breach of work
equipment regulations and was fined a total of £35,000 and ordered to
pay £20,000 in costs.
HSE Inspector Clare Owen, speaking after the
hearing, said: “The conditions at this site were extremely poor and the
dangers were quite clear. It’s very fortunate no-one was killed or
seriously injured there. Mekatek failed to manage basic health and
safety at the site and these multiple failings confirm its approach was
totally inadequate. The issues identified, such as cables trailing
through liquid and management of asbestos should have been immediately
obvious. The management also relied on health and safety managers it
employed for advice but failed to check if they were competent and had
appropriate qualifications, particularly for the management of asbestos.
Twenty tradespeople, on average, die from asbestos related diseases in
Britain every week and it’s the biggest single cause of work related
deaths in the country. The lives of the 34 workers at the site and any
visitors depended on the company meeting its legal health and safety
obligations fully.”
CRS offers our SafetyShare
service for companies like this one. With around 30 employees, it is
sometimes hard to justify a full-time health and safety adviser.
SafetyShare offers part of a competent health and safety adviser’s time –
as little or as much as is needed, and offered flexibly to suit the
needs of the organisation and its site(s). Read more at http://www.crsrisk.com/info/safetyshare or for a completely free review of ‘where you are’, use our free SafetyCheck ‘app’ available from our website www.crsrisk.com or Apple and Google app stores.
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