Ad
Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Unsafe Towers Lead To New PASMA Safety Campaign

ADVERTISEMENT

Pasma Campaign

At this year’s first ever Health & Safety Event in Birmingham, a new campaign on the dangers of using unsafe towers was launched by PASMA.

The campaign aims to show the importance of only using properly assembled towers and those certified  to the European standard BS EN1004 over often cheap and potentially dangerous alternatives – saying that “your life or the lives of others may depend” on using the right tower.

PASMA’s campaign has been created in an effort to combat the use of unsafe tower equipment, brought into sharp relief by the HSE’s blitz of construction sites throughout 2013 with month-long spot checks. During September over 1,000 sites – almost half of those visited – were failing to meet basic safety standards including failures related to the work at height equipment used.

Peter Bennett, PASMA’s Managing Director, said: 

“Dangerous work at height is far more common than it has to be, as using safe equipment can prevent many of the issues that repeatedly come up, such as not fitting proper platforms and guardrails. Simply using an EN1004 tower can make all the difference when it comes to a site’s safety.

“This campaign aims to show that this isn’t just about fines and figures, but about lives. Falling from height kills more people than anything else in the workplace, which is why it warns people using towers that their lives and the lives of others may depend on only buying or hiring a safe tower.”

There are many examples of people whose falls could have been prevented by using safe towers. Robert Wilkin was paralysed when he broke his back last year after falling from a second-hand scaffold tower put up by an untrained builder.

An EN1004 tower could have easily prevented the structure being used in the unsafe way that led to the fall. Safe towers are designed to avoid anyone ever having to stand on an unprotected platform.

Mr Wilkin said:

“I don’t remember much about what happened after I fell. Lots of people were rushing about and it took the ambulance crew about 20 minutes to get me onto a back board because I had fallen in an awkward place between pallets of bricks.

“My life has been ruined because I can no longer do the things I used to do. I can’t go out on my own or drive. I feel my freedom has been taken from me and it’s been really hard on my family.”

Another example of the unsafe work carried out on non-EN1004 towers involved a boy standing on scaffolding with his father, six metres up on a non-EN1004 tower with wide open unprotected spaces he could easily have fallen from.

The tower was not fitted with proper platforms, built-in access or guardrails. At one point the man had to help his 10 year old son onto a too-short portable ladder above him by his ankles.

Children should not even be allowed on safe towers – work at height is obviously for competent adult workers, not children – never mind one from which it would have been so easy to fall. The HSE inspector ordered the man to come down and help his son off of the structure. Later the builder was fined, and sentenced with 80 hours of community service.

PASMA’s website (pasma.co.uk) has set up a new ‘Scaffold Towers’ section as part of the campaign. It outlines the facts about how dangerous unsafe work at height is, and gives simple and practical advice about how to keep safe, as well as offering a free Tower Safety Pack filled with essential information on buying and maintaining a tower.

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest news

ScaffPlan launches 3D scaffold design tool within SketchUp

ScaffPlan has unveiled a new tool that lets scaffolders design and plan scaffolding projects directly in the popular 3D modelling platform SketchUp. The software, called...

Scaffolding contractors boost profits with building wrap partnership programme

Scaffolding contractors are adding a new revenue stream to their businesses through a partnership programme that allows them to profit from building wraps without...

Equinor awards £1.25bn scaffolding and maintenance contracts for onshore plants

Equinor has signed new long-term framework agreements for insulation, scaffolding, and surface treatment (ISS) services across its six onshore plants in Norway. The contracts, worth...

Scaffolders’ tough day as runaway lorry crashes into house

A lorry loaded with scaffolding has collided with a house near Bristol, damaging two cars before coming to rest against the property. The incident happened...

Kirtanlal and Al Masaood partnership set to reshape the Middle East scaffolding sector

Kirtanlal Scaffolding & Formwork has announced a new strategic partnership with Abu Dhabi-based Al Masaood Group, one of the UAE’s most established and respected...

ULMA Construction eyes UK expansion with Des Moore leading setup

European scaffolding and formwork giant ULMA Construction is preparing to enter the UK market, with industry leader Des Moore steering the launch phase. The Spanish-based...

PERI UK’s Terry Hall recognised as ‘Unsung Hero’ for driving formwork safety reform

Terry Hall, Field Services Manager at PERI UK, has been honoured with the ‘Unsung Hero’ award at this year’s CONSTRUCT Day for his work...

Scaffolders urged to tighten safety as climate change brings fiercer storms

Extreme weather is exposing poor practices across the scaffolding industry, as insurance specialists urge contractors to tighten safety procedures in response to increasingly severe...

Connolly Scaffolding unveils major new Salford base as part of multi-million-pound expansion

Connolly Scaffolding has completed a major expansion with the opening of a new 26,000 sq ft warehouse and yard in Salford – a move...

Surge in construction apprenticeships as CITB support drives 61% rise

The Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) has reported a sharp rise in apprenticeship starts, with more than 1,500 new apprentices supported by its New...

Latest news

ADVERTISEMENT

The magazine

Issue 27 | Past issues >>

Popular

ULMA Construction eyes UK expansion with Des Moore leading setup

European scaffolding and formwork giant ULMA Construction is preparing...

Equinor awards £1.25bn scaffolding and maintenance contracts for onshore plants

Equinor has signed new long-term framework agreements for insulation,...

Scaffolders urged to tighten safety as climate change brings fiercer storms

Extreme weather is exposing poor practices across the scaffolding...

Kirtanlal and Al Masaood partnership set to reshape the Middle East scaffolding sector

Kirtanlal Scaffolding & Formwork has announced a new strategic...

Scaffolders’ tough day as runaway lorry crashes into house

A lorry loaded with scaffolding has collided with a...

Related articles

PASMA Set to Phase Out Plastic Cards

PASMA has announced a significant step forward in modernising the way it certifies workers, with the phased rollout of its virtual cards now in full swing. As part of its TowerSure app, the virtual...
ADVERTISEMENTS

Latest topics

4D Structures and PERI UK join forces to build one of Glasgow’s tallest towers

A 21-storey student accommodation building is rising on the...

ScaffPlan launches 3D scaffold design tool within SketchUp

ScaffPlan has unveiled a new tool that lets scaffolders...

Scaffolding contractors boost profits with building wrap partnership programme

Scaffolding contractors are adding a new revenue stream to...

Equinor awards £1.25bn scaffolding and maintenance contracts for onshore plants

Equinor has signed new long-term framework agreements for insulation,...
ADVERTISEMENTS