News - February 2023 - Legal Update
News: HSE alert to food manufacturers
Food and drink manufacturers are being warned of the hazard of inhaling Diacetyl, a flavouring and a by-product of coffee roasting.
Further information:
https://www.hse.gov.uk/safetybulletins/diacetyl-vapour-exposure.htm
News: ‘Menopause Leave’ rejected
The government will not go ahead with a recommendation to introduce "menopause leave" pilots in England. The measure was assessed as counterproductive. It also dismissed a recommendation to make menopause a protected characteristic under the Equality Act.
Further information:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-64381216
News: Sprinklers for care homes and second stairways for tower blocks?
Several amendments are proposed to Approved Document B (the fire safety guidance accompany the Building Regulations), including recommendations to mandate sprinklers in care homes and second staircases for new tower blocks over 30m in height.
Further information:
News: Fire safety information requirements of landlords
Under the Building Safety Act landlords of high-rise residential buildings will need to provide fire safety information for residents. This guidance explains what it should cover:
https://www.hse.gov.uk/building-safety/safety-cases/building-info/index.htm
This guidance explains how to conduct routine checks on fire doors and provide information to residents.
Further information:
News: Advice on E-scooter and E-bike charging
Some straightforward guidance on the charging of e-bikes and scooters has been published.
Further information:
https://www.fia.uk.com/news/charging-faq-for-e-bikes-and-scooters.html
News: Cameron House Inquiry Concludes
The Fatal Accident Inquiry has published its report into the fatal fire at a Loch Lomond-side hotel. There were a number of contributing factors including a lack of fire separation, a long delay before the fire alarm sounded, and inadequate procedures and drills.
Further information:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-64236252
Case law: Failure to maintain building led to member of public fatality
Shopping centre managing agent, Cushman and Wakefield Debenham Tie Leung Limited, has been fined £200,000 by the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors after disciplinary action was taken against it. The company failed to maintain a roof-top plant room resulting in a wooden panel flying off in a storm and fatally striking a member of the public.
Further information:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-birmingham-64249245
Case law: Pallet which had moved in transit, crushed driver
United Pallet Network (UK) Limited has been fined £94,667 after an employee was crushed by a one-tonne falling pallet of glass. Four pallets had not been properly secured before transit and as the employee attempted to rectify the problem, one of them fell breaking his neck in five places, and fracturing bones in his leg and feet. He has been left permanently disabled.
Further information:
Case law: Machine had been modified
Vita Cellular Foams (UK) Ltd pleaded guilty to breaching Section 2(1), Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974 and was fined £180,000 in connection with an accident in which a woman’s hand was drawn into a machine. The accident occurred because a vision window was added to the machine and it could be easily removed whilst the machine was powered, allowing access to moving parts.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2023/01/17/company-fined-180k-after-womans-hand-had-to-be-amputated/
Case law: Kier ordered to pay £4.4 Million
Kier has been prosecuted over two 11kV power line strikes within a year at an M6 project. The incidents were caused by plant working too close to lines. But the risk was made worse by the way that the events were dealt with, such as failing to immediately tell Scottish Power so that a cable was repeatedly reenergised whilst lying on a live motorway.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2023/01/13/civil-engineering-firm-fined-4m-following-m6-works/
Case law: Killed when excavator rotated
Birch Brothers (Kidderminster) Ltd, Principal Contractor, has been fined £146,000 after pleading guilty to breaching Regulation 27(1), Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015. The company allowed workers to stand on a roadway adjacent to where a digger was clearing out a trench box for them to access. The excavator rotated and fatally struck one of the men.
Further information:
Case law: BT fined for unsafe highway works
BT has been prosecuted by Cumbria County Council after one of its sub-contractors carried out cabling work which obstructed the highway on a bend in the road and caused pedestrians to move into the road.
Further information:
Case law: Check sub-contractor competency
A recent case highlights how construction companies can be held responsible when a sub-contractor is not competent. The case concerned the death of a worker during unloading. The team included 17-year-old workers and others, none of whom were given guidance on how to carry out the work safely. The managing director of the firm who directly appointed the contractor watched without intervening as the incident unfolded. Both he and his company, alongside the principal contractor were prosecuted.
Further information:
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