HSE International ISSUE 111 | Page 39

COMPANY FINED AFTER SKYLIGHT FALL FATALITY 9 January 2018 Speaking of Singh, Judge Robert Brown said: Leicester Crown Court heard how clothing factory worker Ranyodh Singh, 33, was working with another employee on a roof, re-siting a heater and new chimney flue, when the incident occurred. Adam Farrer, prosecuting, told the court that a gas heater had needed to be moved to make room for another machine. This required the installation of a new chimney. Singh, who had only worked for the company for a matter of weeks, reportedly volunteered to help the regular maintenance employee with the installation. Both men accessed and sat on the edge of the fragile corrugated roof to carry out the work. The maintenance man then went to get a tool, leaving Singh alone on the roof. He fell through a fragile skylight and died approximately 6 months later as a result of his injuries. “He was a 33-year-old man who’d been there for two or three weeks, with no experience or knowledge of working at height and the employer had a responsibility to look after him. “The fine I impose isn’t to be seen as a measure of the employee’s life, no sentence could ever equate to the value of a human life. “I accept the company didn’t deliberately commit the breach. “There was a total lack of appreciation by the company and director of the legal obligation he was under. “The deceased isn’t in any way to blame for the fatal accident. “There was a failure to instruct employees in relation to working at height - and two employees were allowed to work on a fragile roof. “The work was unplanned and unsupervised and there were no inquiries to establish the recognised industry standards.” An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) into the incident, which occurred on 31 October 2014, found that the work at height on a fragile roof was not appropriately planned, supervised or carried out in a safe manner. IKO-Design Ltd of Parker Drive, Leicester pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 4 and Regulation 9(2) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005. The company was fined £100,000 and ordered to pay costs of £35,000. As reported in the Leicester Mercury, IKO-Design cooperated fully with the HSE, implementing recommendations and taking remedial action to prevent an incident happening again. An independent consultant was engaged to provide a comprehensive health and safety policy. After the hearing, HSE Inspector Michelle Morrison said: “A well planned job would have identified the risks from working on a fragile roof, so that steps could have been taken to prevent the risk of anyone falling from height. This tragic incident was entirely avoidable if appropriate controls had been put in place. “Proper precautions should be taken when working on roofs and near fragile skylights, even for short duration work. Companies should be aware that HSE will not hesitate to take appropriate enforcement action against those that fall below the required standards.” SUSPENDED SENTENCED FOR SCAFFOLDER AFTER WORKING UNSAFELY AT HEIGHT 20 February 2018 28-year-old scaffolder Terrance Murray was recently sentenced after working at height without suitable and sufficient safety measures in place. On 30 June 2017, a concerned member of the public witnessed Murray erecting scaffold in an unsafe manner. Photographs were taken of Murray standing on top of the scaffold in Quay Street, Manchester, with no edge protection and no harness attached to any part of the scaffold or building. The fall height was estimated at between 13 and 18 metres. Greater Manchester Magistrates’ Court heard that if Murray had fallen from this height into the concrete deck of the car park below, there was a high probability that he would have sustained fatal injuries. An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that Murray’s employers had taken reasonable steps to avoid working unsafely at height. Murray was both well trained and experienced, and had the correct equipment available to use in order to work safely. He acted alone, against his better interest and training, working without edge protection and safety measures in place. Murray was also accompanied by a trainee scaffolder at the time, thus setting an unsafe example. Gareth Price, defending, said: “There is no evidence of this being part of endemic practise. It appears to be a one-off moment of stupidity.” Terrance Murray of Largs Road, Blackburn pleaded guilty to breaching Section 7(a) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. He was sentenced to 26 weeks in prison, suspended for one year and 100 hours of community service. Murray was also ordered to pay costs of £500 and a victim surcharge of £115. Speaking after the hearing, HSE Inspector Seve Gomez- Aspron said: “Falls from height remain one of the most common causes of work related fatalities in this country and should be taken seriously. “This case highlights the importance of following industry guidance in order to erect scaffolding in a safe manner, which does not cause risk to members of the public and workers using the scaffold. It also serves to remind employees that they have a duty to look after themselves.” HM Inspector of Health and Safety, Matt Greenly, said: “We are grateful to the court for recognising that, while no one was hurt, the potential risk of harm or death was very real.”  HSE INTERNATIONAL 39