Unsafe roof work led to fatal fall
Two companies from Cardiff and Surrey have been prosecuted today after a man fell to his death through a roof light.
Surrey-based Open Contracts Ltd, and Cardiff-based sub-contractor Malcolm Dunn, have today been prosecuted at Southwark Crown Court following the death of a worker.
On 7 July 2007, Paul Morrissey, 57, of Penarth, Cardiff, fell to his death while working to replace old roof lights in an industrial unit.
Mr Morrissey had been on the roof of Unit 37 Fairview Industrial Estate, Hayes, cutting the bolts which were securing an old roof light, intending to replace it with a new one. It is not known what caused him to fall nearly seven metres through the roof light onto the concrete floor below.
However, the removal of the fixings securing the roof light meant that only slight pressure would have made it give way beneath him. There was no one else on the roof at the time and critically, there was nothing to break his fall. He died at the scene.
The investigation by HSE found that the contractor appointed to carry out the work had little knowledge or experience of this type of roof work. There was also evidence that there was a basic failure to plan the work adequately.
HSE Inspector, Giles Meredith, said:
“The dangers of working on fragile roofs are well known and yet this senseless waste of life continues. This incident was all too familiar. It is vital that anybody planning or carrying out roof work of this nature has the right experience and manages the risks involved. Whoever is responsible for selecting contractors needs to ensure that the people they get in know what they are doing.
“In this case, the provision of safety nets would have kept Paul Morrissey alive.”
Open Contracts Ltd, of The Chandlery, Poole Road, Woking, Surrey, pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to breaching regulations 4(1), 5 and 9(2)(a) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005. The company was fined £60,000 and ordered to pay costs of £29,757.
Sub-contractor, Malcolm Dunn, of Caerau Park Road, Cardiff, who was trading as 3D Coatings, pleaded guilty to breaching regulations 5, 6(3) and 9(2)(a) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005. He was fined £2,000 with no costs. He was ordered to pay this within two years or face a custodial sentence in the event of default of payment.