Norwich director gets suspended prison and community service for dangerous electrics
Norwich Crown Court heard that an investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) had found that Mr Lustig was found to have dangerous electrical installations and equipment in his workplace.In addition, inspectors told the court that the company and its director, Michael Lustig, had failed to report the fall of an employee despite it being classed as a major incident.
Dorothy Amos, aged 49, had been working at Homenaturals Ltd's manufacturing plant on Burton Close, Norwich, when the incident occurred on 19 December 2011.
She had slipped on a floor strewn with debris from the manufacturing process and sustained a serious leg fracture that has kept her off work ever since.
Mr Lustig was found guilty of breaching Section 3(2) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 in relation to the electrical systems at the manufacturing unit. The prison sentence he received will be suspended for 18 months and he was also disqualified from being a company director for three years.
In addition, both Homenaturals Ltd, of Burton Close, Norwich, and Mikael Lustig in his capacity as sole director of the company, admitted a single breach of the Reporting of Injuries, Diseases and Dangerous Occurrences Regulations 1995.
Mr Lustig and the company were fined a total of £300 for failing to report Mrs Amos's fall.
After the hearing, HSE Inspector Malcolm Crowther, said:
"Employers and the self-employed have a legal duty to ensure electrical installations and equipment are safe for use. You should always use a qualified electrician when you install wiring and equipment, and get the electrics periodically checked and tested by an electrician.
"Additionally, the Health and Safety Executive identified a number of issues in relation to Mrs Amos's fall, which could easily have been avoided had the floor surface been free of debris and kept clear and tidy.
"Incidents and injuries like this must be reported, and this did not happen.
"HSE will not hesitate to prosecute where failings of this kind occur and where workers are placed at unnecessary risk."
No comments:
Post a Comment