
![]() |
Mark Sennett
Managing Editor |
![]() |
Kelly Rose
Editor |
Home> | Premises | >Risk Management | >Firm prosecuted after worker loses fingertip |
ARTICLE
Firm prosecuted after worker loses fingertip
06 October 2014
A West Midlands fabrications company has been fined after an employee lost the tip of his finger in an unguarded drill.
Black Country Magistrates’ Court heard the 32-year-old man, from Dudley, was drilling holes into metal components at H&H Alloy Sales when the incident happened on 18 December 2013.
As he pushed a piece of metal which was not moving properly, his hand shot across it and his middle finger became caught on the drill bit. His glove became entangled so he was unable to pull it out.
He had to have the tip of his middle finger amputated and was off work for three months. However, when he returned in March this year, he suffered considerable discomfort and surgeons decided to amputate the finger further, to the first joint. He only went back to the factory three weeks ago.
A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) investigation found the company had a documented safe system of work for the drill which stated that as part of the preparations for work, the guard should be placed in position and then checked by the operator to make sure it is correct. However, the guard had been removed at some point previously and never replaced. It was subsequently re-fitted after being found in a box.
H&H Alloy Sales was fined £13,000 on 2 October and ordered to pay costs of £1391 after pleading guilty to a breach of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.
Speaking after the hearing, HSE inspector Judith Lloyd said: "The incident was entirely preventable. The underlying cause was that it was custom and practice to use the drill without a guard in place. Instruction for employees was lacking and there was no system in place to check that guards were being used correctly, despite having a written procedure.
"It was reasonably practicable to guard the drill and it had in fact been guarded in the past. Wearing gloves without an appropriate guard significantly increased the risk of entanglement, something the company had been provided with advice on during a previous inspection.
"Following the incident the job was completed on a programmable automatic drilling machine which begs the question, why didn’t the company use this method from the start? If it had, a man would have been spared a painful injury.”
MORE FROM THIS COMPANY
- Executive opinion - October 21
- Scaffolder’s serious safety failings captured on film by horrified passer-by
- Two companies fined after director falls through a skylight
- Influential leaders invited to shape Great Britain’s future health and safety strategy
- Roofing company fined after safety failings
- Worker loses part of finger in pie machine
- Jaguar Land Rover fined £900,000 after worker injured
- Building firm sentenced for corporate manslaughter
- Two firms fined over 'life changing' burns to electricity workers
- Narrow escape for victims of 'incompetent' brothers
OTHER ARTICLES IN THIS SECTION