Northampton Crown Court has heard how a 20-year-old employee who broke his back after he fell six metres through a roof light has suffered constant pain and depression since the incident in 2011.
The man from Woolston, near Warrington, was hospitalised for four weeks and has been unable to work since.
The solar panel installation firm he was employed by and its technical director have been prosecuted after an investigation into the incident at Norton Grounds, Daventry on 28 November 2011.
The court heard that he fell while installing solar panels for Alternative Energy Installations Limited, which has since gone into liquidation.
Soft floor material in the barn, used for horse training, helped to break his fall, but he was still hospitalised for four weeks with a serious back injury. The incident has had a significant impact on his life.
The HSE investigated and prosecuted the firm’s technical director, Ian Black, of Denbigh, Wales, for failing to control the risk of falling through fragile roof materials.
Crawling boards and safety netting were subsequently used to continue the job after HSE served a prohibition notice ordering urgent safety improvements in the aftermath of the fall.
Alternative Energy Installations Limited, registered with Hodgsons Accountants of Park Road, Timperley, Cheshire, was today fined £30,000 and ordered to pay £27,000 in costs after being found guilty of breaching section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.
Ian Black, of Henallan Street, Denbigh, Wales, was fined £7,300 and ordered to pay £6,700 in costs after pleading guilty to the same charge at an earlier magistrates’ court appearance.
After the hearing, HSE inspector Peter Snelgrove, said: “This fall could have been fatal and was entirely and easily preventable. As it is, the incident has dramatically affected a young man, starting out in life, and he has not worked again since. He has been affected personally, emotionally and physically and has had to change his whole way of life. He will more than likely need to retrain and his loss of self-confidence has had a drastic effect on his social life.
“The director was aware that the roof lights were fragile, but failed to put any measures in place to prevent falls, despite another worker asking if they would be wearing safety harnesses, at which Mr Black laughed.
“The fact that they were able to overcome the problem so simply afterwards, by using crawling boards and safety netting, shows how easy it was to prevent the incident.
“Alternative Energy Installations Limited should have ensured that the work at height was properly planned and that workers had the right protective equipment and had been trained in its use.”
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