News - March 2023 - Legal Update
News: Legal overhaul on the horizon
We’re anticipating some major changes health and safety legislation as a result of the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill which is making its way through parliament. The resulting Act will automatically revoke, or ‘sunset’, most retained EU law at the end of 2023 other than those regulations deliberately exempted. We don’t yet know which regulations will be nullified.
Further information:
News: Second staircases for London tower blocks.
A second staircase requirement is being imposed on new tower blocks over 30 metres tall and will reportedly affect all current and future applications.
Further information:
News: Mobile elevating work platforms (MEWPs)
There is a known risk when operating a MEWP, of accidentally driving the basket into a position which traps the operator between a fixed part of the structure and a fixed part of the machine, e.g. barrier, control panels etc. The Construction Industry Plant Safety Group has been researching the problem for a while and has now issued updated guidance.2
Further information:
Case law: Makeshift platform collapsed.
After workers used their initiative to overcome the lack of suitable access equipment on site, one of them fell five metres and fractured his spine and ribs. Renka Limited was ordered to pay fines and costs of just over £15,000.
Further information:
Case law: McLaren found guilty over contractor’s fatal fall.
A senior engineer who was inspecting a mobile building owned by motorsport giant McLaren, suffered a fatal fall whilst working alone. Mclaren Services, the client of the work, was found guilty of health and safety breaches as a result of the work taking place close to unguarded edges. The sentencing hearing is expected to take place on 31 March.
Further information:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-berkshire-64788827
Case law: Siemens PLC fined £1.4million
Siemens PLC has been fined £1.4m after it was charged over a fatal accident. The case concerned an accident in 2017 when a technician was killed by a falling 650Kg motor.
Further information:
Case law: People slept upstairs at petrol station
A business owner has been fined over £100,000 after it was found that people were sleeping on the premises without fire safety precautions in place.
Further information:
Case law: Hand tangled around large drill
GE Aviation Systems Limited has been prosecuted for a breach of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998, Regulation 8 (1), 11 (1) and 16 (1) in connection with an accident at a drill. The large drill lacked guarding and had no emergency stop device.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2023/01/25/company-fined-after-worker-seriously-injures-hand/
Case law: Diving fatality
A diving instructor has been sentenced to 50 hours of unpaid work after a student drowned. Failures related to equipment checks, supervision and rescue arrangements.
Further information:
Case law: Transport risks were left uncontrolled
A company which operates the Iceland distribution centre in West Swindon has been fined £125,000 and ordered to pay £80,623 in costs after pleading guilty to breaching Section 2, Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. An employee of GXO Logistics Services UK was injured when a vehicle hit a cage within the warehouse. It was also found to have breached the RIDDOR regulations.
Further information:
Case law: Inexperienced teenage worker injured
A farmer has been prosecuted after giving work to two young workers without ensuring they had the training. One of them was seriously hurt when a dumper overturned.
Further information:
https://press.hse.gov.uk/2023/02/15/exeter-farmer-fined-after-teenage-worker-injured-on-dumper/
Case law: Work placement student killed
A recent case followed the death of a 17-year-old engineering student, Neil Graham, who was killed beneath a tractor he was working on. The machine rolled forward just after being started up by Neil’s work host, Gordon Brown. The tractor had a safety feature to prevent it being started when in gear but this had been by-passed prior to the machine arriving at the workshop. In court, both the work placement host and the owner of the vehicle were fined.
Further information:
Case law: Choking risk was not managed
A court has heard how a resident with complex health needs died because care workers were not trained in her feeding plan. Shirley Breeze died after being fed a marshmallow which caused choking followed by two cardiac arrests and a seizure.
Further information:
Case law: Fireworks set off when a lit firework landed in truck
A fireworks organiser has been prosecuted over a fire and explosions which occurred in a parked truck. A thin plastic sheet was all that protected the stored fireworks.
Further information:
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-dorset-64571618
Case law: Principal contractor and roofer in court
As a recent case highlights, safe access routes are needed for the entire route that a worker needs to take whilst working at height. Two companies collectively were fined £386,000 after poor planning of access routes led to workers passing by fragile materials before they could attach to a roof top fall arrest system. One of the workers fell 20 feet through a rooflight landing onto a suspended ceiling and breaking his ankle.
Further information:
Case law: Roped access was not appropriate for type of work
A firm which sent workers to install lightning protection using roped access techniques rather than a scaffold or cherry picker, has been blamed for the subsequent fatal accident. Dennis Vincent fell along with the frame that he was using to lower a load whilst working for PTSG Electrical Services Limited. The company was fined £120,000.
Further information:
You want to stay up-to-date?
Join our mailing list!




