|
Vizor
Tempered Glass Fined £50,000 after Glass Incident Results in Horrific
Injuries
The
Health and Safety Executive is urging employers to stamp out dangerous
working practices after a Port Talbot company was prosecuted for an incident
in which one of its employees suffered horrific injuries when he fell
into a skip full of broken glass and then had a pane of glass fall onto
him.
Vizor Tempered Glass Ltd, of Baglan Industrial Estate, pleaded guilty
at a previous hearing to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety
at Work etc Act 1974, and Regulation 3(1)(a) of the Management of Health
and Safety at Work Regulations 1999. The company was fined a total of
£50,000 and ordered to pay costs of £11,171 at a hearing in
Swansea Crown Court last Friday.
The injured party, Ricky Waters, 38, from Cwmavon, was disposing of waste
glass at the company's premises when the incident happened on the morning
of 25th October 2006.
Mr Waters was riding on a stillage being used to carry the glass, which
was itself being carried by a forklift truck into the company's yard.
The stillage, with Mr Waters still on it, was then raised by the forklift
truck over a skip in order for Mr Waters to begin putting in the waste.
A gust of wind caught a pane of glass Mr Waters was about to place in
the skip, which resulted in him falling into the skip, and the glass falling
in after him. He needed major reconstructive surgery on his face, suffered
a fractured skull and lost the sight in one eye.
HSE inspector Alan Strawbridge said: 'The company has admitted a failure
to carry out proper risk assessments and a failure to have safe systems
of work in place, which ultimately resulted in this incident.
'Companies - especially those dealing with potentially hazardous materials
such as glass - need to ensure that they implement and maintain safe systems
of work to avoid incidents like this occurring.
'In spite of the terrible injuries suffered by Mr Waters, the consequences
of this case could have easily been much worse.'
|