A Lancashire-based toy distributor and a builder have been sentenced
after a worker plunged to his death through a warehouse roof. Craig
Gray, 39, from Fleetwood, had been helping to clear debris from the roof
when he fell nine metres through a fragile plastic panel at Halsall
Toys Europe Ltd on 19 July 2012.
The company and builder David
Plant were both prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) on
20 March 2015, after an investigation found no safety measures had been
put in place to make sure the work could be carried out safely. Preston
Crown Court heard debris had been washing down the roof and into the
gutters, causing them to overflow into the warehouse below. Halsall Toys
had arranged with Mr Plant, an unemployed builder, for the roof
cleaning work to be done, but did not carry out any checks to make sure
he was competent.
Mr Plant and Craig Gray climbed onto the roof,
which covers 36,000 square feet, without any preparation work or
planning having taken place in advance. They failed to use harnesses or
any other equipment to keep them safe. The men were four days into the
project when Mr Gray stood on one of the clear panels, designed to let
in light, which gave way sending him nine metres to the concrete floor
below. He died at the scene.
Halsall Toys Europe Ltd pleaded
guilty to a single breach of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974
by failing to ensure the safety of Mr Gray. The company, of Copse Road
in Fleetwood, was fined £200,000 and ordered to pay £10,483 towards the
cost of the prosecution.
David Plant, 60, of Shetland Road in
Blackpool, was given a 6 month prison sentence, suspended for 12 months,
after being found guilty of a breach of the Work at Height Regulations
2005 by failing to make sure the work was carried out safely.
Speaking
after the hearing, HSE Inspector Allen Shute said: “Craig Gray should
never have been allowed onto the warehouse roof without being given
suitable training and equipment, but both Halsall Toys and David Plant
allowed his life to be put in danger. Halsall Toys hired Mr Plant to
carry out the work despite him not having any previous experience of
working on industrial roofs. The firm should have carried out checks to
make sure the work would be carried out safely. Mr Plant also had a
legal duty to make sure the right equipment was used for the job,
whether it was using harnesses or simply placing covers over the fragile
roof panels to remove the risk of them collapsing.”
CRS
Managing Director, Stephen Asbury said “Sadly incidents of workers
falling through warehouse roofs are all too common, and it’s vital firms
do more to make sure this kind of work is carried out safely and by
competent people.”
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