Construction News

Fri April 26 2024

Related Information

Fines total £30k after excavation collapse

5 Mar 15 The director of a building firm broke a leg when an unsupported excavation collapsed on him last year.

Planks were added to shore up the excavation after it had collapsed
Planks were added to shore up the excavation after it had collapsed

Paul Connolly, director of Bushey-based PNT Contractors Ltd, had to be rescued by two employees digging him out by hand after the excavation collapse at a site in Essex in July 2014.

The incident was investigated by the Health & Safety Executive (HSE), which this week (4th March) prosecuted both Mr Connolly and his company at Southend Magistrates’ Court.

The court heard that PNT Contractors Ltd was carrying out extensive ground work at a site in Crays Hills, Billericay, when the incident took place.

Paul Connolly had used an excavator to dig into the side of a slope, leaving unsupported excavation sides of up to 2.5 metres high.

Mr Connolly and another employee were working in the sheer-faced excavation when it collapsed. The second worker managed to jump clear but Mr Connolly was partially buried and trapped by the falling earth.

Related Information

HSE served a prohibition notice the following day, stopping any work until the excavation was made safe.

PNT Contractors Ltd of Sparrows Herne, Bushey, Hertfordshire, was fined £15,000 and ordered to pay costs of £1,176 after admitting a breach of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations.

Paul Martin Connolly of Lipton Street, Watford, was also fined £15,000 and ordered to pay costs of £1,176 for a similar breach by virtue of being a director of the company.

After the hearing, HSE inspector Adam Hills said:  “Paul Connolly not only endangered himself, but was reckless with the lives of his employees. Every year people are killed or seriously injured by collapsing trenches. The dangers here were obvious. A few simple and inexpensive precautions could have easily prevented this from occurring. To prevent a collapse you should shore, step, or batter back the sides. Do not assume ground will stand up unsupported.”

Got a story? Email news@theconstructionindex.co.uk

MPU
MPU

Click here to view latest construction news »