Tuesday 29 March 2016


Health and Safety in the news this week

Schools asbestos 'scandal' still threatening lives – report

Decades of lax attitudes towards tackling deadly asbestos in schools is a national "scandal" threatening the health of former, current and future schoolchildren, a wide-ranging investigation has found.

The Joint Union Asbestos Committee (JUAC) said examples of the problem in schools underlined "systematic failings" in the way it was dealt with by successive governments.  The JUAC said Whitehall had a "scandalous disregard for life" by permitting inadequate surveys and campaigning against compulsory detection that it said would help prevent future cases of asbestos cancer mesothelioma.

The report said successive governments failed to require schools to keep asbestos records and inform parents about the material in their child's school.  It said:

"This has enabled the culprits to evade responsibility for asbestos exposure leading to mesothelioma, allowing them to escape with impunity.  Nothing can be done to put right past asbestos exposure, but we must do more to protect future generations of school children and staff."

Asbestos can be found in wall panels, ceiling tiles, floors, fire breaks, columns, door frames, and ceiling and wall voids but it can also creep into classrooms and corridors if it is disturbed, such as through having children crashing into affected areas.  The UK currently has the highest incidence of mesothelioma in the world and it is steadily increasing.  According to the Health and Safety Executive, more people in the UK die from the disease than in road accidents. 

The report identified one asbestos victim, Sarah Bowman, who developed the disease in her 40s, more than three decades after leaving Braincroft Primary and William Gladstone schools in the Brent area of London.  She was said to have been too ill to attend the National Union of Teachers (NUT) conference in Brighton this weekend where the report was presented.

The report found the risk to children - including Ms Bowman's son, who attended one of the schools several years later - was underestimated because risk assessments and tests were designed for adults working with asbestos, and not for long-term exposure of children who are known to be more vulnerable.

JUAC said government documents released under Freedom of Information rules suggested full and comprehensive new laws to reduce the risk of exposure to asbestos were dismissed by politicians on cost grounds.

Mary Bousted, general secretary of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers (ATL), described the report as "shocking".

She said: "It is outrageous that staff and pupils are still dying from being exposed to asbestos in schools.  ATL has been campaigning about this for years. Action must be taken by the Government now."

Unite general secretary Len McCluskey said: "Only through the safe, planned removal of all the asbestos which still remains in place across the UK, will the deadly menace of asbestos be lifted from future generations."

Experts say the true scale of the problem is not known, because no comprehensive survey has been done to establish which buildings are affected.

Asbestos campaigner Hank Roberts, presenting the report at the NUT conference, said: "It is disgraceful. This document shows absolutely everything you can think of has been going wrong - negligence, deceit, lying.  Saying it is safe is an absolute lie."

A Department for Education spokesman said: "Nothing is more important than the health and safety of children and staff in our schools.  Since 2010, billions has been invested to improve the condition of the school estate, with a further £23 billion on school buildings to come over this Parliament.  This will help ensure asbestos is managed safely and that the amount in school buildings continues to reduce over time.  We have also published new guidance on managing asbestos in schools, and have transformed the way in which we collect information on asbestos to better our understanding."

Source: www.dailymail.co.uk


 
HSE prosecution round up:

Automotive company fined after worker loses finger

A Birmingham-based automotive company has been fined after a worker lost his finger.

Birmingham Magistrates’ Court heard how a welder at Lander Automotives Limited was expected to work on a variety of jobs as required by production.  While he was working on a machine the employee’s glove became entangled in the drill bit.  He suffered partial amputation to the third finger on his right hand.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) into the incident which occurred on 17 June 2015 found that the company failed to provide adequate training, a safe system of work, a risk assessment or method statement.

Lander Automotive Limited, of Clapgate Lane, Birmingham, pleaded guilty to breaching Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974, and was fined £27,000 and ordered to pay costs of £1,574 and a £120 victim surcharge.


Solar panel specialists in court for roof light fall failings

 

A solar panel firm has been £153,000 after a worker was seriously injured in a fall through a fragile roof light at a private home in Kent.

The worker, from Ashford, fractured his shin and a vertebra in the incident at Elvington Lane in Hawkinge on 30 April 2013.

The roof light the 32-year-old man crashed through was on an outbuilding housing a swimming pool.  Although the water partially cushioned his fall, he made a heavy impact with the side and flooring around the pool, and was unable to return to work until January this year and only then on a part-time basis.

Glasgow-based P V Solar UK Limited was sentenced at Canterbury Crown Court after an investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that more could and should have been done to prevent the fall.

The court had heard in a hearing in January 2016, when the company pleaded guilty to three health and safety offences, that the injured worker was part of a three man team working on the pool building to replace faulty solar panels that were initially installed by the same company in April 2011.

The fragile roof also contained eight roof lights and he fell through one of these as he walked on the roof while carrying a panel.

HSE established that a scaffold tower, ladder and safety harness had been provided for the panel replacement work.  However, none of the installation team had received any formal training or instruction on how to use them.  This effectively rendered the equipment useless.  Other measures could also have been taken, such as providing full scaffolding or hard covers for the rooflights.

HSE established that although the initial installation work in 2011 was completed without incident, the safety equipment provided on that occasion was also lacking, which again placed workers at risk.

The court had also been told that P V Solar was served with a Prohibition Notice by HSE to stop unsafe work on a fragile roof in Bristol in May 2011.  The company was therefore well aware of the need to ensure that adequate provisions were in place to prevent or mitigate falls during work at height.

P V Solar UK Limited, of Cambuslang Road, Glasgow, was fined a total of £153,000 and ordered to pay a further £29,480 in costs after pleading guilty to three separate breaches of the Work at Height Regulations 2005.

After the hearing, HSE Inspector Melvyn Stancliffe said:

“The injured worker suffered serious injury in the fall and could have been killed.  He and his colleagues were effectively left to their own devices with equipment that was not wholly suited for the task at hand.  In short, better equipment, training and supervision should have been provided.  Working on or near a fragile roof or materials is not a task to be undertaken without proper planning, and without having the appropriate safety measures in place at all times. There is considerable free guidance available from the HSE regarding the precautions needed when working at height, including on or near fragile roof coverings.”


 

HSE Health and Safety Myths Buster

Gym manager queried customer’s complaint on gym users topping up personal water bottles from cooler

Issue

A customer made a complaint about other gym users filling up personal water bottles from a water cooler instead of using the disposable cone cups provided. The customer stated that this was against health and safety regulations as germs could be spread this way.

Panel opinion

It is important for gym users to keep hydrated and there are no health and safety reasons why they cannot do so using their own bottles rather than the paper cups provided.  Other establishments which do ban gym users from using their own bottles are likely to have other motives for doing so – but it is not a health and safety issue.


 

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