11/01/2011
Safety Probe Sees Builder Fined For Failings
A building contractor has been fined after employees were found to have lifted heavy building materials at height with no measures to prevent falls in place.
Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors visited a site in Dumbleton, Gloucestershire, in December 2009 and found structural steelwork weighing 92kg had been lifted into place using only scaffolding only five feet high during construction of a house extension.
Inspectors found no risk assessment in place which would have highlighted the unsuitability of this method of work.
The men had lifted the steelwork from the floor onto the scaffold and then stood the scaffold to fit the structure into final position. No measures had been taken to prevent or mitigate falls from the scaffold.
This had happened on more than one occasion and the inspection also found the scaffolding had no edge protection. He concluded the work was not adequately planned or managed.
DA Cook (Builders) Limited, based in Winchcombe, pleaded guilty at Gloucester Magistrates Court of failing to comply with section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was fined £2,000 and ordered to pay costs of £3,800.
After the hearing, Tony Woodward, HSE Inspector, said: "The way this work was carried out, with four men lifting a heavy piece of steelwork onto a scaffolding platform and then lifting it into its final position was inappropriate and potentially dangerous.
"Manual handling as we have seen here should be avoided wherever possible and appropriate equipment used.
"In this case there was also a failure to eliminate the risk of a fall from the scaffolding platform, or even to minimise the consequences of any fall."
(CD/GK)
Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors visited a site in Dumbleton, Gloucestershire, in December 2009 and found structural steelwork weighing 92kg had been lifted into place using only scaffolding only five feet high during construction of a house extension.
Inspectors found no risk assessment in place which would have highlighted the unsuitability of this method of work.
The men had lifted the steelwork from the floor onto the scaffold and then stood the scaffold to fit the structure into final position. No measures had been taken to prevent or mitigate falls from the scaffold.
This had happened on more than one occasion and the inspection also found the scaffolding had no edge protection. He concluded the work was not adequately planned or managed.
DA Cook (Builders) Limited, based in Winchcombe, pleaded guilty at Gloucester Magistrates Court of failing to comply with section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was fined £2,000 and ordered to pay costs of £3,800.
After the hearing, Tony Woodward, HSE Inspector, said: "The way this work was carried out, with four men lifting a heavy piece of steelwork onto a scaffolding platform and then lifting it into its final position was inappropriate and potentially dangerous.
"Manual handling as we have seen here should be avoided wherever possible and appropriate equipment used.
"In this case there was also a failure to eliminate the risk of a fall from the scaffolding platform, or even to minimise the consequences of any fall."
(CD/GK)
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