Labourer Falls and Injured
A labourer broke two ribs after falling off the edge of a temporary staircase after a colleague removed the guardrail.
The employee, 38, from Moodisburn, was working for a Scottish Company on the site of a new build house in Edinburgh, when he and a colleague were asked to carry some doors upstairs to keep them out of the way during building work.
A temporary staircase with half landings had been put in while the house was built, and there was a gap between one of the half landings and the wall, with a feature window behind it. For most of the build, this gap had been protected by a guardrail, but two days before this had been removed by a joiner to allow him to fix plasterboard to the wall, and then not replaced.
They managed to carry seven or eight doors up the stairs without a problem, with his colleague in front, and him behind. However, as they carried the next door up the stairs, the employee stepped off the edge of the half landing and through the gap, falling nearly three metres to the landing below.
He was taken to hospital, where he was diagnosed with bruised kidneys and two fractured ribs. He was off work for three months while his injuries healed and needed physiotherapy after he went back to work.
A Health and Safety Executive investigation found that the work had not been planned properly as an adequate risk assessment had not taken place; that the site manager was aware the guardrail had been removed and should have known there was a risk to his team, and that the work was not carried out in a safe manner.
The company eventually pleaded guilty and was fined £8,000.
Updated on 9/13/2011