Mark Sennett
Managing Editor |
Kelly Rose
Editor |
Home> | Slips, Trips & Falls | >Fall Prevention | >Roofer fell from unsupported ladder |
Roofer fell from unsupported ladder
18 March 2019
A REPAIR and maintenance company has been fined £150,000 after an employee fell from two metres while working on a roof.
Barkingside Magistrates’ Court heard how, on 7 September 2016, a roofer was working with a colleague to repair a leaky roof in Seaton Avenue, Felixstowe. There was no edge protection around the roof and access to the roof was via an unsecured ladder, so as the roofer accessed the ladder it slipped causing him to fall from a height of approximately 2 metres. The worker sustained contusion and bruising to his head along with hearing damage.
An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive found the assessment of the work prior to the arrival of the roofers on site was inadequate. There was neither a system for checking the correct equipment for work at height was being used, nor for supervision of the work on site.
RFT Repairs Limited of King Street, Norwich pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 4(1) of Work at Height Regulations 2005 and has been fined £150,000 and ordered to pay costs of £5,391.76.
HSE inspector Prentiss Clarke-Jones, speaking after the sentencing said: “Roof work requires a high level of planning, and supervision should be in place to ensure it is carried out safely.
“This incident so easily could have been fatal; work at height is a well-documented, well-regulated risk and there is no excuse for getting it wrong”.
- Police investigate Grenfell 'stay put' policy
- ‘Think differently about safety,’ regulator urges farmers
- Health and Safety Event set to reunite OSH community
- Nestle fined £640,000 after worker traps arm
- Digital conference on Fire Safety Bill
- Driver suffers brain injury in fall
- Groundbreaking gig economy deal
- Plumber handed suspended sentence for gas work
- Renown Consultants fined £450k after road deaths
- Businessman jailed for "flagrant" breaches of fire safety laws