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January 29, 2014

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Self-employed builder fined £10,000 for work at height breaches

 

The HSE has reminded employers of their legal duties to manage safety, after a self-employed building contractor was fined for exposing workers to serious risk of injury while working at height.  
 
On 4 July 2014, a passing HSE inspector saw three workers on a barn roof with nothing to guard them against an eight-metre fall.
 
On 27 January, Ian Pitman, 56, appeared at Swindon Magistrates’ Court following the incident. The inspector passed a firm in Burton, Wiltshire, where a new barn was being erected. He saw the men installing roof sheets without any means of preventing or mitigating a fall from the perimeter of the steel frame or from the leading edge of the roof sheets.
 
The inspector issued an immediate prohibition notice preventing any further work at height until safety measures were put in place to protect the workers.
 
HSE’s subsequent investigation found that Ian Pitman had been contracted to build the barn and had employed the three workers, who do not wish to be identified, to assist with construction.
 
He had failed to ensure that protective measures, such as scaffold edge protection and safety netting, were in place to prevent or mitigate a fall from height, leaving the three men at risk of serious or fatal injury.
 
Ian Pitman, of Honeyknobb Hill, Kington St Michael, Chippenham, was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay £735 in costs after pleading guilty to breaching  regulation 6 (3) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005.
 
Speaking after the hearing, HSE inspector Ian Whittles, said: “Ian Pitman neglected to implement basic safety measures to minimise the risks of falls, despite having been the subject of formal enforcement action by HSE on the inadequate planning of working at height on a previous occasion.
 
“The dangers of working at height are well known in the construction industry yet poor safety standards and lack of safeguards still exist among some contractors.
 
“For the last ten years or so there has been a significant increase in the number of incidents involving falls from the roofs agricultural buildings. This prosecution should serve as a reminder to all contractors to properly plan any work at height and make sure robust safety precautions are in place. All employers have a legal duty to manage safety and failing to do so can end in tragedy.”

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Bob Kennedy
Bob Kennedy
10 years ago

When are we going to see prosecution of WAH breaches repeatedly demonstrated on numerous tv programmes? A few prosecutions of such bad practice may have more effect than WAH GUIDANCE. Which appears to fail miserably, given the never ending continuance of ignorance of often basic control of evident risk?