Southport firm in court over worker's roof fall
A Southport company has been fined after an employee sustained serious injuries when he fell some 4 metres from a bungalow roof. The 60 year old from Southport, who has asked not to be named, fractured his skull and back, and broke several ribs in the incident on 6 March 2014. Instruments and Gauges Electronics Ltd. was prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) after an investigation found that the employee was not given suitable equipment to carry out the work safely. Sefton Magistrates' Court in Bootle heard that the company specialises in manufacturing and repairing electrical test equipment, but that its managing director is also the landlord for several homes. The employee was asked to repair a broken ridge tile on the roof of a bungalow on Fylde Road in Southport. He used his ladder to reach the flat roof on a conservatory at the back of the property. The worker then pulled the ladder up onto the conservatory roof and used it to reach the tile at the top of the bungalow roof. He fell around four metres and was found on the ground by the tenant, who called for an ambulance. The employee was in the high dependency unit at the hospital for a week before being transferred to a normal ward, and was off work for 19 weeks as a result of his injuries. The HSE investigation found the work on the roof had not been planned or supervised and the worker had not been given suitable equipment, such as scaffolding or a harness.
The company also failed to report the incident to HSE despite this being a legal requirement when workers suffer a serious injury.
Instruments and Gauges Electronics Ltd, of Gravel Lane in Banks, was fined £6,000
and ordered to pay £961 in prosecution costs after pleading guilty to single
breaches of the Work at Height Regulations 2005 and the Reporting of Injuries,
Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 2013.
Speaking after the hearing, HSE Inspector Jackie Western said:- "One of
the company's employees has suffered serious injuries that may well affect him
for the rest of his life because his employer ignored its legal duty to make
sure he stayed safe.
Falls from height are the most common cause of deaths and serious injuries in
the construction industry. The work to repair the ridge tile should have been
planned properly, but instead the employee was allowed to climb up to the roof
without suitable equipment.
Instruments & Gauges Electronics should have made sure the work was carried out
safely or, better still, hired a specialist roofing firm that knew what it was
doing.”
More information on health and safety in the construction industry is available
at:-
HSE.Gov.UK/Construction.