The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Firm gets £7,000 fine for man’s ladder fall

Thornton painter suffers ‘lifechangi­ng injuries simply through going to work’

- craig smith csmith@thecourier.co.uk

A maintenanc­e firm has been hit with a hefty fine after admitting health and safety failings which led to a Fife man suffering serious injuries.

Novus Property Solutions Limited was fined £7,000 at Kirkcaldy Sheriff Court for not ensuring that work at height was properly planned, appropriat­ely supervised and carried out in a safe manner in relation to an incident in Glenrothes on October 26 2015 that left Charles Foster, above right,with multiple broken bones.

Mr Foster, who lives in Thornton and was employed by the company at the time, had been doing painting work at the Highland Reserve Forces and Cadets Associatio­n’s Baltimore Barracks when the ladder he was on slipped.

The nature of the work meant a suitable guarded platform, such as a tower scaffold or mobile elevated work platform, should have been used instead of ladders, the court heard.

Mr Foster, who was 64 when the incident happened, suffered multiple fractures to his right shoulder, a broken left wrist, a fractured left knee and required several stitches to a head wound after falling around three metres to the ground. The court heard he still feels the physical and emotional effects and is undergoing physiother­apy.

Work had started at the barracks on September 21 2015 and, on the day of the incident, four painters – including Mr Foster – had been painting exterior metal cladding.

The Crown confirmed a “mix up” saw an anti-slip mat left in the work’s van. Mr Foster climbed the ladder and felt it “slip slightly” before it “slid away from the wall completely”.

Novus Property Solutions Limited, which has around 800 employees, argued the health and safety breach was clearly “not systemic but localised”, describing it as an “isolated” incident, and highlighte­d a raft of safety training measures taken by the company in light of what happened.

“The company has invested heavily in training – I don’t think, in any way, they can be described as ‘cowboys’,” a solicitor acting for the firm said, also pointing out that Mr Foster could be described as an “experience­d painter”.

The court heard “robust” procedures had also been in place, although the firm acknowledg­ed assessment­s had been insufficie­nt.

Sheriff Christophe­r Shead ruled the starting point for considerin­g any fine should be £10,000, but reduced that to £7,000 after the firm’s early guilty plea.

A spokespers­on for Digby Brown Solicitors’ Kirkcaldy office, said Mr Foster had suffered “serious and life-changing injuries simply through going to work”. “No-one should be left in this position,” the spokespers­on added.

“This is a case which shows just how important proper and robust health and safety in the workplace is and the sad consequenc­es of it not being in place.”

This is a case which shows just how important proper and robust health and safety in the workplace is and the sad consequen– ces of it not being in place

 ?? Picture: Gareth Jennings. ?? The accident occurred at the Highland Reserve Forces and Cadets Associatio­n’s Baltimore Barracks.
Picture: Gareth Jennings. The accident occurred at the Highland Reserve Forces and Cadets Associatio­n’s Baltimore Barracks.
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