Mark Sennett
Managing Editor |
Kelly Rose
Editor |
Home> | Handling & Storing | >General Handling | >Company in the dock for catalogue of failings |
Home> | Handling & Storing | >Lifting Equipment | >Company in the dock for catalogue of failings |
Home> | Premises | >Risk Management | >Company in the dock for catalogue of failings |
Company in the dock for catalogue of failings
20 February 2023
A BUILDING firm has been fined for a catalogue of health and safety failings that included two builders being lifted into the air by a raised excavator bucket.
A photograph caught the moment a pair of workers stood in the bucket of a digger to fit a stone into the top of a new home in Littleborough, Greater Manchester.
It was one of a number of health and safety failings found during construction work at The Villas development on Starring Road in Littleborough.
Health and Safety Executive (HSE) inspectors visited the housing development on 7 July 2021 and issued Hoyle Developments Limited, the site’s principal contractor, with a Prohibition Notice for inadequate scaffolding and Improvement Notices for a lack of welfare facilities and insecure fencing.
HSE inspectors had visited the same housing development site four times between November 2018 and August 2021. Repeated breaches were found including a lack of sufficient welfare, unsuitable controls for work at height and inadequate protection from silica dust exposure. Hoyle Developments Limited was served with multiple Notifications of Contraventions, Prohibition Notices and Improvement Notices.
Hoyle Developments Limited, of Edenfield Road, Rochdale pleaded guilty to breaching Section 3 (1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. The company was fined £120,000 and ordered to pay £3,165 in costs at Manchester Magistrates’ Court on 25 January 2023.
HSE inspector Mike Lisle said, “This proactive prosecution demonstrates that HSE will not hesitate to take proactive enforcement action against those that continuously fall below the required standards and demonstrate persistent poor health and safety. Health and safety should be an integral part of any business, not an afterthought, and having a clear health and safety policy and construction phase plan in place, before work commences, can assist with ensuring this.”
- Warning over new 'bottom-up' HSE inspections
- International spread of companies in line for top award
- HSE safety alert issued against KN95 facemask
- More support for school staff
- Practitioner's viewpoint - March 21
- Consultation opens on RIDDOR change
- Grey fleet drivers missing safety checks
- How to convince your boss to take safety seriously
- Practitioner viewpoint - June 19
- Joiner falls and breaks nine ribs