News - April 2022- Legal Update
News Coronavirus
End to mandatory vaccination. Regulations revoking mandatory vaccinations for health and social care settings, came into force on 15 March 2022.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/vaccination-of-workers
Venues and events. The government has updated its guidance for those who wish to use NHS COVID passes and negative test results as a prerequisite for entry to a venue or event.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/carrying-out-covid-19-status-checks-at-your-venue-or-event
Travel. Employees that are not fully vaccinated when travelling for work, have testing rules to follow according to their job role. Employers will need to familiarise with the current rules, ensure that staff understand testing requirements, and take reasonable steps to support them in taking these tests. For those with more than 50 employees, this is a legal duty.
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/coronavirus-covid-19-employer-testing-duty
News: PPE
New legislation - PPE amendment regulations. Regulations have been published which will amend the Personal Protective Equipment at Work Regulations 1992 (PPEWR). The result will be that certain self-employed workers who were not previously entitled to free PPE, will need to be provided with it by the business that they work for.
https://www.legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2022/8/contents/made
News: Fire
London, Whitechapel, tower block fire. It was observed that a fire at a block of flats in Whitechapel spread externally from the 17th floor, due to timber within the balcony structures. A full investigation report is pending
Further information:
Major fire at block of flats and offices in Whitechapel (ifsecglobal.com)
Uninterruptable power supply fire risk. A safety alert has been issued by the HSE after a number of incidents of fire caused by a lack of maintenance of uninterruptable power supply (UPS) systems. It’s concerned that users are given the impression of the system having a lifespan expectation with no maintenance when some components have a life expectancy which is lower than the whole system.
Further information:
https://www.hse.gov.uk/safetybulletins/ups-systems-industrial-maintenance.htm
Lessons from the Glasgow School of Art fire. The Scottish Fire and Rescue Service has published a report into the 2018 fire at The Glasgow School of Art. It will be useful for those carrying out or commissioning construction work with various pointers on how to reduce fire risk particularly so as to protect property.
Further information:
News: COSHH
Woodworking guidance. The HSE says has published updated woodworking COSHH Essentials guidance documents.
Further information:
https://www.hse.gov.uk/coshh/essentials/direct-advice/woodworking.htm
News: Driving
Mobile phones and driving. A wider ban on using hand-held mobile phones and similar devices while driving came into effect on 25 March 2022. It will make it illegal to access other apps such as the camera or watch TV etc. whilst driving.
Further information:
Roadside recovery of electric vehicles. The government has published guidance on the hazards of roadside recovery of electric and hybrid vehicles.
Further information:
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/recovery-operators-working-with-electric-vehicles
News: Child Safety
Button and coin batteries. Businesses who manufacture, import, distribute or sell any products using button or coin batteries should follow new government guidance so as to protect young children who are at risk of swallowing them.
Further information:
https://www.gov.uk/guidance/using-button-and-coin-batteries
News: Construction
Emergency wellbeing support for construction workers. The Lighthouse Construction Industry Charity has launched a service to provide immediate wellbeing support to the construction community. Wellbeing support is available to workers and their families at any time of the day or night.
Further information:
Mobile crane maintenance. The Construction Plant-hire Association has updated its guidance on maintenance of all types of mobile cranes to ensure their roadworthiness.
Further information:
Case law
£2 million fine for allowing work in a restricted enclosure. Recycling firm, Alutrade Limited, has been fined £2 million with £105,000 in costs after admitting corporate manslaughter. 35-year-old employee Stuart Towns was struck by moving machinery in an area which was supposed to be securely fenced off. He received fatal head injuries. Two company directors and the Health and Safety Manager pleaded guilty to health and safety charges and were personally fined.
Further information:
Scaffolding gap allowed fall from height. Infiniti Roofing and Construction Ltd has been sentenced for breaches of safety regulations after an employee fell three metres through a gap in scaffolding and sustained serious arm injuries. In court the company was fined £22,667 plus costs of £7228.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/03/11/company-fined-after-worker-suffered-fall-from-height/
Unsafe construction site management. A principal contractor has been sentenced after he was found to have supervised unsafe excavation work at a site in Denton, which put workers in danger and rendered the neighbouring property unstable.
There was no construction phase plan, risk assessments or method statements, no competent site manager, deep and unprotected excavations, no security, a lack of PPE and some workers working barefoot on site.
Mustapha Matib was sentenced to sixteen weeks imprisonment suspended for twelve months, ordered to carry out 200 hours unpaid work and pay costs of £5,673.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/03/21/principal-contractor-sentenced-for-unsafe-excavation-work/
Fatal collapse of building blamed on multiple parties. An accident which caused the death of worker Jeffrey Plevey in July 2017 has led to the prosecution of four individuals and a scaffolding company. The worker was killed when an unstable wall collapsed along with a scaffold which was stood against it. The combined failures of the project team were exposed in court.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/02/02/recycling-company-fined-after-18-year-old-employee-injured/
Son prosecuted for father’s death whilst glass fitting. Night and Day Glaziers Ltd has appeared in court over the fatal fall of Arthur Harbutt, 78, former director of the company. The man fell from the scaffold into the building at Cribbs Causeway, Bristol, a side which was not protected by scaffold railings. His son Garry Harbutt was convicted of safety charges but cleared of gross negligence manslaughter. He was fined £4000. The company was fined £31,500 and ordered to pay £15,000 in costs.
Further information:
Unqualified excavator driver was employed. A construction company, its director and an excavator driver have all been sentenced over an accident in which a man was crushed by an overturning excavator and spent a year in hospital.
The driver had no certification to drive an excavator and was given a suspended sentence. J Murphy Aggregates Ltd was fined £70,000 and a director was handed an eight-month custodial sentence, suspended for two years. He was also required to undertake 160 hours of community service and pay court costs.
Further information:
Dumper truck had faulty brakes. A plant company has been fined for failure to maintain the braking system of an articulated dumper truck leading to the dumper running out of control and overturning on a carriageway.
Further information:
Asbestos company faked paperwork. An asbestos management company director has been jailed for 10 months after pleading guilty to cutting corners and faking paperwork on a major refurbishment project in Plymouth.
Ensure Asbestos Management Limited also pleaded guilty to breaching Section 2(1) and 3(1), Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 and was fined £100,000, although, as it is in liquidation no money is expected to be paid.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/02/18/asbestos-removal-company-fined-for-failing-to-protect-workers/
Bandsaw accident. A manufacturer has been prosecuted after an inexperienced employee followed an unsafe system of work instructed to him by his supervisor and lost two fingers. The employee of Hanson Springs Ltd attempted to lubricate a new band saw blade by pressing a cardboard tube of wax onto it whilst it ran. The tube was drawn in, pulling in his hand after it. The company was fined £200,000 plus costs of £5,394.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2022/03/17/spring-manufacturer-sentenced-after-worker-severs-fingers/
Sainsbury’s receives £1 million fine. Sainsbury’s has been fined £1 million after a customer ran into a tight piece of string at head height, when driving a mobility scooter. The twine had been put in place after plastic tape, used to define a queueing system was vandalised. The customer sustained very severe facial injuries.
Further information:
https://www.shponline.co.uk/in-court/sainsburys-fined-1m
School staff member fell through attic floor. A school has been prosecuted after a teaching assistant fell through a ceiling. She had been in the partly boarded attic to retrieve a spare desk when the accident occurred.
Comment: The case highlights the need to consider whether attics are a suitable place to store heavy items. Storing and retrieving boxes and furniture from these locations generally involves using ladders whilst lifting with two hands, in addition to the potential risks in the attic caused by low head room and missing flooring.
Further information:
15-year-old burned by exploding can at recycling plant. A & S Metal Recycling Limited has been prosecuted after two teenagers were instructed to put aerosol canisters through a shredding machine, causing a flash fire and one of them to be seriously burned. The Director, Simon Davies, pleaded guilty to breaching Section 37(1), Health, and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 and was given a six-month custodial sentence suspended for two years and was ordered to complete 100 hours of unpaid work.
Further information:
£1.5 million fine for gantry failure. Cleveland Bridge UK Limited has appeared in court over a fatal accident involving an electrician who fell from an overhead crane. Keith Poppleton was killed when an access panel gave way on the crane’s walkway. It appeared to have been dislodged during previous works and not checked it was safely secured afterwards.
Comment: A permit to work system for maintenance in high-risk locations could have prevented the accident by a check on completion that the area of the work had been left in a safe condition for the next user.
Further information:
Vulnerable resident crushed by loose door. Mulberry Care Limited has been prosecuted by the Care Quality Commission after an accident in which a confused elderly resident was struck by a falling loose door. The accident occurred after maintenance work in which the door was removed and left leaning against a wall in a hallway for weeks.
Further information:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-60494593
£500,000 fine for scaffold firm’s unsafe methods of handling. Suffolk scaffolding company, Brisko, has been fined after an employee was crushed by a bundle of steel weighing more than a tonne when it slipped from the forks of a forklift truck. The fine was high because the firm had been given a prohibition notice requiring it to stop moving whole stacks of steel bundles in one go, appealed against the notice on the basis it did not follow that practice, and then continued doing just that.
Further information:
https://www.ioshmagazine.com/2022/03/04/scaffolders-ps515k-penalty-workers-crush-injury
You want to stay up-to-date?
Join our mailing list!




