October 19th, 2009

London’s High Court is to hear evidence this week regarding a hammer attack that left a schoolboy fighting for his life.
Henry Webster, 18, was a pupil at Ridgeway School near Swindon when the incident happened in January 2007.
He had agreed to meet another pupil on the tennis courts after school following an altercation, but was ambushed by a group of much older boys when he got there.
The gang had claw hammers and Mr Webster was left with brain damage.
He took legal action against the school, claiming that it had done nothing to prevent racial tensions which had been threatening to erupt for some time.
At a hearing in May, Judge Hagen said it was "astonishing" that staff had not been supervising pupils after hours, but the school denies that it was responsible for the attack.
The victim is claiming £1 million in damages from the school in a case which is to see scores of witnesses take to the stands this week.
Schools have a duty of care towards pupils and anyone injured while on school premises should seek advice from a personal injury lawyer, as they may be eligible for compensation.

Tags: 1 Million, Altercation, Brain Damage, Claw Hammers, Damages, Duty Of Care, Hagen, Hammer Attack, Henry Webster, London, Mr Webster, Personal Injury Lawyer, Pupil, Pupils, Racial Tensions, School Premises, Schoolboy, Tennis Courts
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October 14th, 2009

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has warned schools that they must put appropriate safety measures in place following an incident in which a 16-year-old girl suffered burns so serious that she had to have most of her fingers amputated.
During an A Level art class at the Giles School in Lincolnshire, the unnamed girl decided to make a plaster cast of her hands and filled a vat with plaster of Paris.
However, she was unaware that the substance gives off intense heat when mixed with water – an exothermic reaction – and she plunged her hands into it. The plaster set rapidly and the pupil was unable to get her hands out. Staff and fellow students tried, but an ambulance had to be called while the girl’s hands were burning inside the plaster.
After she got to hospital, it was found that her injuries were so severe that she had to have both of her thumbs and all but two of her fingers amputated.
The school’s governing body was fined for breaching health and safety regulations, and HSE inspector Jo Anderson said the incident should serve as a warning after it was found that pupils were not instructed about the dangers plaster of Paris could pose.
"We want the public to understand that risk assessments in educational establishments must not be viewed as burdensome, but instead, paramount to pupil safety," she remarked.

Tags: Art Class, Educational Establishments, Exothermic Reaction, Fellow Students, Giles School, Governing Body, Health And Safety, Health And Safety Executive, Hse Issues, Intense Heat, Level Art, Lincolnshire, Old Girl, Plaster Cast, Plaster Of Paris, Pupil Safety, Pupils, Risk Assessments, Safety Measures, Safety Regulations
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September 15th, 2009

Teachers’ unions have said that schools need to become safer after it was revealed that over £2 million has been paid out in compensation by Scottish schools since 2004.
According to figures released this month, £1.5 million was paid out to injured staff, while another £600,000 was given in compensation to pupils, STV reports.
One claim was from a school worker who tripped over a carpet in West Dunbartonshire and was paid £4,000.
Another came from a pupil who fell on the school steps in Glasgow and was awarded £29,000 in compensation.
Sources from teachers’ unions said it is not satisfactory that staff are having to claim for accidents that could easily be avoided if education facilities were safer.
Occupiers of schools have the same responsibility to prevent injury as any other landowner so anyone who suffers from an accident on school premises should seek the advice of a solicitor specialising in personal injury claims.

Tags: 5 Million, Accidents, Carpet, Dunbartonshire, Education Facilities, Glasgow, Personal Injury Claims, Pupil, Pupils, School Premises, School Steps, Scottish Schools, Solicitor Specialising, Teachers Unions, West Dunbartonshire
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May 26th, 2009

A man who claims his dreams of playing professional football were shattered after he was injured at school has won the right to sue his local council.
Scott Palmer, then 14, was heading out into the playground at Tretherras School in Cornwall for a game of football in 2001 when he was struck in the eye with a rock.
The stone had been thrown at a seagull, but accidentally struck the victim, causing permanent sight problems.
Mr Palmer took legal action against the school, claiming that the children had not been properly supervised and that his chances of playing for Plymouth Argyle FC – where he had been given a trial before the incident – had been ruined.
In a new development, Lord Justice Waller said Cornwall county council had been "clearly negligent" in leaving one dinner lady to supervise over 150 pupils and ruled that Mr Palmer should be allowed to sue for his injuries.
The victim could now receive a six-figure payout for the pain and suffering he was caused.
Anyone who suffers a personal injury as a result of an accident that was not their fault should seek legal action within three years of the event in order to be eligible for compensation.

Tags: Cornwall County Council, Dinner Lady, Dreams, Eye Injury, Game Of Football, Local Council, Lord Justice, Pain And Suffering, personal injury, Playground, Plymouth Argyle Fc, Professional Football, Pupils, Scott Palmer, Seagull, Six Figure
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May 21st, 2009

A group of parents are suing a school after their children were injured when a heating duct collapsed into a gym.
The pupils were among 200 sitting SAT exams at Minster College on the Isle of Sheppey last week when the piece of machinery fell from the roof and landed on them, Kentnews.co.uk reports.
One, Rhys Sullivan, suffered a fractured jaw and is still off school.
His mother Victoria Sullivan said: "We will be going down the legal route. It’s a group of about nine of us. That hall should never have been in use."
The Health and Safety Executive is currently investigating the incident and the headteacher said he understands the parents’ desire to look into their legal situation.
Anyone who suffers a personal injury as a result of an accident that was not their fault should seek legal action within three years of the event in order to be eligible for compensation.

Tags: Collapse, Desire, Fractured Jaw, Health And Safety, Health And Safety Executive, Legal Situation, Parents, personal injury, Pupils, Victoria
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