Informa Markets

Author Bio ▼

Safety and Health Practitioner (SHP) is first for independent health and safety news.
May 4, 2017

Get the SHP newsletter

Daily health and safety news, job alerts and resources

Double fine for work at height dangers

Two roofing contractors have been fined after the HSE investigated hazardous working conditions where men were seen working on a roof without edge protection.

MKM Fabrications Ltd had been employed as the principal contractor to carry out a roof replacement on one of the buildings at Valley Mills, Millgate, Delph, Oldham which is currently used for textile production.

The company subcontracted part of the project to Clad-It Limited, which effectively meant employees from two companies were alongside one another.

Concerns were raised to the HSE claiming that men were working on the roof with nothing in place to prevent them falling off the edge or through the roof onto mill workers below. The subsequent HSE investigation confirmed these hazardous working conditions were in place, with workers from both MKM and Clad-It at risk.

Inspectors also established that these working practices continued during snowy weather.

The project involved replacing a northern light roof structure with a modern composite roof. The roof was covered in fragile skylights, which had not been covered to prevent any person stepping onto them and falling through, nor was any measures taken to prevent a worker falling through the large gap created after the skylight had been removed. Mill employees were also at risk from being hit by falling tools or debris.

Prohibition Notices were served stopping the works until a safe method could be found and put into place.

As principal contractor for the works, MKM Fabrications had the primary responsibility for the health and safety of workers. MKM failed to effectively plan the safe completion of the project and failed to put in place measures to prevent anyone falling from the unguarded sections of the roof.

Obvious risks

MKM Fabrications of Oldham pleaded guilty at Manchester Magistrates’ Court to safety breaches and was fined £66,000 with £3938.38 costs.

As subcontractor for the works Clad-It had a duty to protect its own workers as well as anyone affected by its works. By allowing its employees onto site without a suitable and sufficient planning being in place, or any physical safeguards to prevent a fall from height, the company exposed its own workers to those risks.

Clad-It Limited, also of Oldham, pleaded guilty and was fined £66,000 with £3938.38 costs.

HSE inspector Matt Greenly said after the case: “MKM and Clad-It failed in their duties to protect the roof workers and anyone working below them in the mill from a foreseeable risk of serious harm.

The risks to workers here were obvious, and neither company thought it necessary to manage the work at height risks properly.”

 

The Safety Conversation Podcast: Listen now!

The Safety Conversation with SHP (previously the Safety and Health Podcast) aims to bring you the latest news, insights and legislation updates in the form of interviews, discussions and panel debates from leading figures within the profession.

Find us on Apple Podcasts, Spotify and Google Podcasts, subscribe and join the conversation today!

Subscribe
Notify of
guest

1 Comment
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Kim Godfrey
Kim Godfrey
7 years ago

What responsibility does the company contracting the roofers have?