Sunday Express

Grave insult: Families slam warning signs

- By Jaymi Mccann

WARNING signs have been hammered into 160 graves in a council move blasted as “health and safety gone mad”.

The safety notices were attached to wooden stakes by memorials and headstones deemed to be a risk of collapse at Teddington Cemetery, in south-west London.

Furious mourners visiting loved ones at the Grade Ii-listed site near Twickenham have labelled them “upsetting” and “offensive”.

But Lib Dem-controlled Richmond Council, which erected the signs, says the owners of each grave must pay to make it safe before they are removed.

The warning reads: “Caution – memorial is unsafe, do not touch.”

It adds: “Following recent memorial safety testing memorials found to be unsafe have now been identified and temporaril­y made safe. The council apologises for any distress this may have caused but treats safety with the highest priority. Memorial owners must now contact a suitably qualified contractor to take swift action to have the necessary repairs carried out to British Standard 8415 and current industry codes of practice. It is a legal requiremen­t for councils to carry out regular safety testing to ensure the safety of memorials.” The authority acted despite Ministry of Justice guidance on managing cemetery safety.

It reads: “The issue of memorial safety has from time to time been the subject of adverse publicity and public distress – often because of over-zealous risk assessment­s or poor communicat­ion.

“In light of this, burial ground operators have expressed concern

about how to respond appropriat­ely to the risks presented by unstable gravestone­s. Significan­t risks should of course be properly managed. “But the risk of injury from a gravestone or other memorial which has become loose and unstable is very low.

“Any action to manage risks in burial grounds needed to be sensible, proportion­ate, and undertaken in a sensitive way. “

But Katherine Fisher, whose husband, son and mother are buried at Teddington, said “The action carried out by the cemetery’s authoritie­s is upsetting, offensive, disproport­ionate and a total waste of money.

“There must surely be a more sensitive

way of contacting grave owners from their database.” Another mourner, who wished to remain anonymous, described it as “health and safety gone mad” and a “desecratio­n”.

Sir John Hayes, chairman of the Common Sense group of Tory MPS, said: “When one hears this kind of nonsense it undermines the claim councils are strapped for cash.”

A Richmond Council spokespers­on said it was carrying out a legal requiremen­t to ensure all our memorials are safe, adding: “In Teddington there are 160 that need remedial work, from 750 tested, with a significan­t number within a section which is part of the safe routes to school scheme.”

 ?? Picture: STAN KUJAWA ?? DESECRATIO­N: Scores of signs on graves; left, Sir John Hayes
Picture: STAN KUJAWA DESECRATIO­N: Scores of signs on graves; left, Sir John Hayes
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 ?? ?? STRAPPED UP: Safety notice attached to a headstone
STRAPPED UP: Safety notice attached to a headstone

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