The engineering firm that engaged the family business was also prosecuted.
A concerned passer-by spotted two workers, both sons of roofer Alan Lane, standing on the pitched roof of Nathan Engineering on the Neachells Lane Industrial Estate in Wednesfield without any safety measures to prevent or protect them from a fall.
He took photos of the work on 5th February 2013 and sent them to the Health & Safety Executive (HSE), which investigated.
Wolverhampton Magistrates’ Court heard this week that Nathan Engineering had employed Alan Lane to overclad its fragile asbestos cement roof with metal sheets. It provided Mr Lane with materials and a method statement and also supervised the work.
However, no edge protection or other safety equipment was provided. To access the roof Mr Lane’s sons used a scissor lift, but it did not extend to the full height. So they clambered onto the rails of the lift to cover the remaining distance.
Magistrates were told that although nobody was injured, they were working some six to eight metres above the ground, and that a fall from that distance could have proved fatal.
Alan Lane, of Boundary Close, Claverley, Bridgnorth, Shropshire, was fined £3,200 and ordered to pay costs of £4,771 after pleading guilty to breaching regulation 4(3) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005.
Nathan Engineering (Wednesfield) Ltd, was fined £6,400 and ordered to pay costs of £9,453 after pleading guilty to breaching Regulation 4(1) of the same regulations.
HSE inspector Gareth Langston said after the hearing: “As the client, Nathan Engineering should have ensured the roof work was properly planned, appropriately supervised and, above all, safe. Alan Lane should have taken suitable measures to prevent falls but instead allowed his sons to be put at risk.”
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