Widow awarded £300k after husband’s asbestos-related death

October 22nd, 2009

Widow awarded £300k after husbands asbestos-related death

A woman has been awarded compensation of £300,000 after her husband died from the asbestos-related cancer mesothelioma.

Michael Streets left school in 1963 and got a job as an apprentice oil fitter at Fawley Refinery, the Southern Daily Echo reports.

Although he left the company in 1975, Mr Streets said he recalled there being no safety measures in place to protect employees against the danger of asbestos. In fact, he said in a statement before he died that workers used to have ’snowball’ fights with the fibres and that the air was thick with deadly dust.

Mr Streets contracted mesothelioma and died in December 2007. His widow Francis took legal action against the Esso Petroleum Company and it recently admitted liability.

She is to be awarded £300,000 in compensation for her loss.

Asbestos-related cancers typically affect five times as many men as women because they are often the result of working in industries that used the materials in the 1960s, Cancer Research UK attests.
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HSE issues warning after school is fined over burns

October 14th, 2009

HSE issues warning after school is fined over burns

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.

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HSE issues warning after worker suffers crush injuries

August 6th, 2009

HSE issues warning after worker suffers crush injuries

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has warned employers that they must have appropriate safety measures in place after a case in which a worker was badly injured.

Stephen Shore was working at the Calder Industrial Materials Jupiter Drive site in Chester in February 2008 and had been trying to clear debris from a conveyor belt.

However, there was no guard on the machine and Mr Shore became trapped. The heavy machinery cracked several ribs and badly bruised him.

The firm was prosecuted under the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998 and HSE Inspector Bruce Jones said it was an accident that could have been prevented.

"This case should act as a reminder to employers of the importance of safety in the workplace. Effective measures must be put in place to prevent serious injuries from dangerous machinery," he commented.

Last month, Kent News reported that a woman who had also suffered crushing injuries at work had been awarded £14,500 by her employers.

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Worker seeks compensation after forklift accident

July 29th, 2009

Worker seeks compensation after forklift accident

A young mechanic is seeking compensation after his arm was almost severed in an accident involving a forklift truck.

Martyn Coope, then 17, was working at William West Distribution in West Hallam and had been asked to load biscuits onto a trailer.

He had never been trained to operate a forklift and he had previously told his supervisors that the brakes were faulty.

As he attempted to drive it, the brakes failed and he crashed into a lorry trailer, trapping his right arm.

Surgeons initially feared that Mr Coope would have to have it amputated, but it was eventually saved through skin grafts and metal pins.

The victim is now seeking compensation after William West Distribution admitted failings in health and safety measures.

"These practices were potentially lethal. It was only by good luck that the accident was not more debilitating or fatal," said Judge John Stobart.

According to the Health and Safety Executive, forklift trucks account for approximately one-quarter of all workplace transport major injuries to employees every year.

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Accident at work results in company fine

June 4th, 2009

Accident at work results in company fine

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has warned that companies face prosecution and possible compensation payouts if they fail to ensure the safety of their workforce.

Shorts Group of Ascot was recently fined under safety regulations after an employee sustained severe injuries in an accident.

The unnamed man, a demolition labourer, was working on a construction site in May 2008 when the skip-loading dumper he was on overturned. The worker had not received any training to use the vehicle and was trapped underneath.

He badly hurt his foot and the HSE took action against Shorts Group for its negligence.

Karen Morris, HSE Inspector, said: "Dumpers are involved in around a third of construction transport incidents, causing many deaths and serious injuries … we expect trained and competent operators at all times."

Safety regulations state that employers should make sure all workers are competent and fit to use all vehicles and machines at work.

By law, firms must give employees sufficient training in safety measures when they first start with the company and whenever they begin to carry out new tasks which involve risks.
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