Derby Telegraph

Dangerous graves will be repaired to prevent injury

COUNCIL WARNS OF ‘COUNTLESS ACCIDENTS’ ACROSS THE UK

- By EDDIE BISKNELL Local democracy reporter eddie.bisknell@reachplc.com

A DERBYSHIRE council is spending thousands of pounds to make sure disrepaire­d grave and cemetery memorials do not topple over and injure or kill people.

South Derbyshire District Council has agreed to spend up to £30,000 over the next five years assessing disrepaire­d memorials in the six cemetery and five closed churchyard sites under its management.

It says six people have been killed in England in recent years after cemetery memorials fell on them.

The authority also says there have been “countless” accidents ranging from bruising to severe crush injuries and broken bones.

It says these incidents are caused by neglect to maintain the memorials, which are the property of the person or people who own the particular grave, but the council remains culpable as manager of the overall cemetery sites themselves.

The council said: “Since Victorian times memorials have been erected on graves as a permanent reminder of those buried within.

“It is often wrongly assumed that memorials are permanent structures, installed to the highest standards and will last forever without any need for repair. Unfortunat­ely, this assumption has cost the lives of six people nationally in recent years, most of whom have been children and there have been countless accidents ranging from bruising to severe crush injuries and bone breakages.

“Local authoritie­s have to tackle years of neglect and in some cases poor workmanshi­p.

“Yet the memorials do not belong to the council - they remain the property of the person/s that has been granted the exclusive rights of burial.”

Memorials could be cordoned off or laid flat on the ground if in disrepair or in danger of falling over.

The authority expects the process of carrying out safety testing, ahead of any subsequent repairs, over the next five years, will cost between £25,000 and £30,000.

Repairs will be the responsibi­lity of the owner of each plot and repairs must be carried out to agreed standards. If the owner cannot be traced the council will consider repairing them itself if funds are available.

The council says assessment­s must be carried out to “ensure a safe environmen­t for visitors and staff at our cemeteries” .

In the first year of safety testing, part of the Church Gresley cemetery will be assessed, with the rest of the site assessed in the second year.

Work at Newhall cemetery and St Stephen’s Churchyard in Woodville will start in year three. Year four will see work to cemeteries in Marstonon-Dove; Etwall; Findern; and Moor Lane in Aston-on-Trent.

The final year of the five-year programme will see work to the churchyard­s at All Saint’s in Findern; All Saint’s in Aston-on-Trent; St Michael’s in Willington; and St Wilfrid’s in Barrow-on-Trent.

A safety testing report says: “The safety assessment is to test whether memorials can withstand a reasonable hand force. This force has been arrived at scientific­ally and replicates the force of a person falling, pushing or pulling against a memorial.”

The assessment­s will look out for cracks in headstones, waterlogge­d ground around the memorial, missing chunks of the memorials or lopsided structures. These can be caused by poor workmanshi­p, tree roots, vandalism, subsidence, weed killer chemicals, weather or storm damage, animal or insect activity and accidents, the report says.

Any memorial found to be unsafe whether staked or not will have a warning notice attached explaining the situation.

 ??  ?? Church Gresley cemetery will be among the first to be assessed for gravestone and memorial risks
Church Gresley cemetery will be among the first to be assessed for gravestone and memorial risks

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom