Worker breaks all his ribs and punctures lung in plunge
Galliford Try and a subcontractor have been fined for serious safety failings after a Coventry worker suffered life-changing injuries after falling more than six metres through a badly-covered hole in a floor.
Contract worker Ian Howells, 33, of Tile Hill, punctured his lung, broke every rib on the left hand side of his body, shattered all the bones in his left hand and fractured his pelvis in three places as he stepped onto what he thought was a pile of wood covered by plastic.
He was bedridden for two months and was unable to work for a year after the incident on 26 November 2010 at a fifth floor plant room undergoing construction at Edgbaston cricket ground.
He still suffers considerable pain, walks with a limp and has not regained full use of his hand.
Birmingham Magistrates’ Court heard that he and a colleague were trying to move a heavy floor grinder when he stepped onto the wood.
He was unaware it was a polythene covered pallet placed on top of scaffolding that concealed a service void. The pallet snapped and sent him crashing to the fourth floor below.
An HSE investigation found that Parkstone Group Limited and main contractor Galliford Try should have done more to prevent the accident.
Neither company had properly assessed the risks or devised a safe system of work for moving the floor grinder.
HSE identified that no information had been provided to anyone working on site in relation to the risks posed by covered voids, and there was no signage affixed to the void to highlight the potential danger.
There was also no safe access to the room where work needed to be undertaken. Workers had to access the fifth floor by pulling themselves through the void and then a gap between a scaffolding guard rail.
Parkstone of Coleshill, West Midlands, and Galliford Try Construction pleaded guilty to safety breaches.
The companies were each fined £13,500 and ordered to pay £3,345 costs.
After the hearing HSE inspector Paul Thompson said: “This incident was entirely preventable. The system of work adopted by Galliford Try and Parkstone Group was unplanned and unsafe.
“Workers were not provided with a safe means by which to do their jobs, or the right equipment to help them do it.
“The hole in the floor had been covered with a polythene-covered pallet to prevent rain from getting in, but it was not obvious that it was concealing a hidden danger and individuals at work were not informed of this.
“As a result Mr Howells has suffered life-changing injuries that he will never fully recover from.”