A building contractor has been fined £600,000 and its director has been ordered to complete 100 hours of unpaid work and fined £4,200 following serious and repeated failings in managing the risk of fire during work at a construction site. In January 2018, the HSE undertook a proactive inspection to investigate health and safety failings by S&S Quality Building Contractors Limited at a construction site after a concern was raised that people were sleeping on site.
The subsequent HSE investigation, which was assisted by Essex Fire & Rescue Service, identified failings in fire management at the site which created risks to workers and members of the public who were visiting show flats outside of business hours. The environment at the site was poorly managed and the construction work was being carried out in an unsafe manner that could have resulted in a fire.
You’re responsible for fire safety in a business or other non-domestic premises if you are the employer, the owner, the landlord, an occupier or anyone else with control of those premises. This is known as the responsible person.
S&S Quality Building Contractors had previously been subject to HSE interventions after risks of a fire had been identified across a number of sites over several years. Evidence gathered during the proactive HSE investigation indicated that the company director, Shlomo Pines, regularly attended the site and failed to implement improvements from previous HSE interventions.
S&S Quality Building Contractors Limited pleaded guilty to breaching Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. The company was fined £600,000 and ordered to pay costs of £36,894 at Basildon Crown Court on 25 October 2022**.**
Company director, Shlomo Pines, London pleaded guilty to contravening Section 37 of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. He received a community order to complete 100 hours of unpaid work and was fined £4,200.
After the hearing, HSE Inspector Prentiss Clarke-Jones said:
“S&S Quality Building Contractors Limited completely ignored the importance of fire safety measures on a construction site led by a director who willfully chose to ignore the risks despite evidence he knew how to make things safe. This unsurprisingly resulted in a site where risks were also ignored by his workers. Follow the guidance, get competent advice and take responsibility that the law requires at the very least, or someone may get hurt, which thankfully did not eventuate here.”
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