UK demolition contractor fined for allowing son to work on pub roof without scaffolding.
The Health and Safety Executive prosecuted Ivan Pope after two men were spotted dismantling the roof of a disused pub in Lincolnshire using just the upturned bucket of an excavator to work from.
Leicester Crown Court heard that between 16 and 25 January 2008, Mr Pope, trading as Westwise Demolition, was demolishing the former Manvers Arms public house on Monks Road in Lincoln. The demolition involved piece-by-piece removal of the two storey pub’s roof tiles.
One man sat on the roof, removing tiles and passing them to the son of the defendant, who was standing in the upturned bucket of an excavator positioned level with the edge of the roof.
Once the bucket filled with tiles, Mr Pope’s son climbed onto the roof before the bucket was lowered, emptied and raised back up; he then climbed back in and carried on the task.
There was no scaffolding to prevent the men on the roof from falling and nothing to protect those working below from any tiles dropped or dislodged during these activities.
Mr Pope, of Hassock Hill Drove, Gorefield, in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire pleaded guilty to two counts of breaching Section 3 (2) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 for failing to ensure people not in his employment were not exposed to risks to their safety.
He was today fined £6,000 and ordered to pay £13,483 costs by Leicester Crown Court.
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