The company involved in the in the original post has a turnover of approx £127m, a large organisation, there is no info on the contractor involved, probably so small as to be insignificant. It sounds as though such a large oganisation should not have using such a small "cleaning company" without adequate resources for this job.
Someone as been killed at work.
Someone should be held to account.
Fining a small cleaning contractor a few thousand pounds cannot be right. Can it?
Read this for more info.
http://news.stv.tv/scotl...over-workers-fatal-fall/For those that cannot be bothered, the above reads:
A sheriff blasted Tullis Russell’s company’s safety arrangements as “amateurish” following Thomas Sturrock’s fatal fall.
However, the fine imposed on the paper makers - whose turnover was more than £127m in 2010 - was slashed because the sheriff was "concerned" a larger penalty could "bring the company to its knees".
Mr Sturrock had been part of a team clearing tons of vegetation and debris from the roof of Tullis Russell’s factory at Southfield Industrial Estate, Glenrothes.
He plunged around 50 feet through the fragile asbestos cement roof as he carried two full black bags filled with rubbish.
Fiscal depute Issma Sultan told Kirkcaldy Sheriff Court that a sub contractor had been brought in to clear 24.5 tons of vegetation from the fragile roof.
The contractors brought in - who Mr Sturrock worked for - had given the cheapest quote, but the court heard an employee of Tullis Russell had failed to follow proper procedures when hiring them.
Pre-contract safety paperwork had not been filled in, while workers were not wearing harnesses or ropes or using crawl boards to traverse the fragile roof. Bags filled with heavy debris were also left in piles on the roof.
Ms Sultan told the court that at midday on September 29, 2008, Mr Sturrock had been walking with two filled bags of rubbish towards his brother-in-law, David Keillor, who was standing on the edge of the roof throwing bags into a skip below.
There was a sudden cracking sound, and Mr Sturrock disappeared from view.
Steve