A Hereford based construction firm has been fined for height safety failings after an employee fractured his back after falling more than three metres through a roof.
The 49 year-old employee, also from Hereford, had been working to convert a garage into a garden room at a home in Westhide, Hereford when the incident occurred on 24 May last year.
Nunnington based S C Joseph, was today (19 July 2013) prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) after an investigation found the firm had failed to ensure suitable measures were in place to prevent or mitigate a fall from height.
Herefordshire Magistrates' Court heard that the employee had been working on the roof to install two roof lights. As he stepped onto a roofing batten that he had placed across a metre square hole cut for one of the lights, by his colleagues, it gave way. He fell 3.5 metres onto the concrete floor below, fracturing his vertebrae. He was unable to work for eight weeks.
The court was told the company should have put safety measures in place below the open holes in the roof, such as a low levwl platform or a birdcage scaffold that would have allowed work to be carried out from below.
S C Joseph, of Sandalwood, Nunnington, Hereford, pleaded guilty to a single breach of the Work at Height Regulations 2005. The company was fined a total of £4,000 and ordered to pay £1,516 in prosecution costs.
Speaking after the hearing, HSE Inspector Keiron Jones said:
"Falls from height are the biggest cause of workplace deaths and injuries, yet with some simple measures they can easily be prevented.
"S C Joseph should have carried out a proper assessment of the risks and then controlled them so that the work could be carried out safely. Had there, for example, been a platform beneath the roof opening then the worker could have avoided the serious back injury he sustained."