*Cleanzine_logo_2a.jpgCleanzine: your weekly cleaning and hygiene industry newsletter 18th April 2024 Issue no. 1110

Your industry news - first

The original and best - for over 20 years!

We strongly recommend viewing Cleanzine full size in your web browser. Click our masthead above to visit our website version.

Search
English French Spanish Italian German Dutch Russian Mandarin


Redditch recycling firm fined £100,000 for worker's death

A Redditch recycling company has been sentenced for safety failings after a worker was killed by a bale of waste weighing more than a tonne.
Kenneth Swaby, 43, from Canvey Island, Essex, was struck by the falling bale as he walked past a stack of them, some five metres high, at R&S Recycling in Beoley, in 2011. Three of the bales toppled over and one landed directly on top of him, killing him instantly.

An investigation by the Health & Safety Executive established that R&S Recycling failed to properly control the risks to employees working at the site, particularly with regard to the proper storage and safe stacking of waste materials.

Regulation 10 (4) of The Work at Height Regulations 2005 states: "Every employer shall ensure that materials and objects are stored in such a way as to prevent risk to any person arising from the collapse, overturning or unintended movement of such materials or objects."

Worcester Crown Court heard earlier this month that stacks of unstable material, such as baled paper and plastic, should slope backwards towards the top, and the bales should be interlocked to prevent them from falling. The stability of the stack should be checked regularly, and where bales can fall, workers on the ground should be kept well clear.

On this occasion, HSE found that the stacks of bales were uneven and too high, with no measures in place to prevent employees approaching them on foot. As a result, the company was fined £100,000 and ordered to pay costs of £57,927 after pleading guilty to a single breach of the Work at Height Regulations 2005.

Speaking after sentencing, HSE Inspector Jan Willets said:

"Mr Swaby's tragic death could have been prevented had R&S Recycling made simple and adequate provisions to protect employees working with and alongside stacks of baled waste.

"The risks from materials falling from storage at height are clear, and there are necessary procedures for the safe management of bales in stacks. Yet on this occasion, Mr Swaby was able to walk right next to these unstable bales, with devastating consequences."

Further information on safe waste recycling can be found on the HSE website at: www.hse.gov.uk

For more information about working safely at height visit:

www.hse.gov.uk

20th February 2014




© The Cleanzine 2024.
Subscribe | Unsubscribe | Hall of Fame | Cookies | Sitemap