Ad
Thursday, December 11, 2025

Family angry with landlord over ex-scaffolders death

ADVERTISEMENT

20110408-103037.jpg

A GRIEVING daughter has criticised a landlord for not mending a broken gas pipe outside her father’s Bournemouth flat last Christmas Eve.

Ex-soldier and scaffolder Ernest Begbie was found dead inside his first floor flat in Windham Road, Boscombe, the next day after using a borrowed patio heater indoors to try and keep warm.

At an inquest in Bournemouth, district coroner Sheriff Payne recorded the verdict that the 64-year-old’s death from carbon monoxide poisoning had been an accident.

Friend and neighbour Mary O’Gormley said Mr Begbie had borrowed the tabletop heater a few weeks earlier.

“He had been having problems with the boiler for a while,” she told the hearing.

He was aware of the warnings attached to the heater, but told her he would just use it for five minutes to take the chill off the room.

She became concerned when she could not contact Mr Begbie on Christmas Day. A friend broke in and found him lying dead upstairs with the door and window shut.

There was only a trace of alcohol in his system, but he had taken cocaine and heroin.

The inquest heard a fire officer and police officers had been called to the house in the early hours of Christmas Eve because Mr Begbie reported that a gas pipe had been pulled off the wall while he was out. The gas was switched off.

Landlord Steven Wells said Mr Begbie visited his offices to report the damaged pipe to his manager.

“There wasn’t a lot we could do on Christmas Eve,” he said.

Mr Begbie’s daughter Georgina, herself a property manager, told the coroner: “It’s a legal requirement for them to carry out that repair. It would have taken 45 minutes. They didn’t even attempt it.

“When I visited the office, they couldn’t even look me in the eye. He chose to have that heater in there, but he didn’t have any choice. He was cold.”

After the hearing, Mr Wells offered his condolences to the Begbie family.

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest news

Brogan Group and Alimak strike global partnership

Brogan Group has formed a new strategic alliance with Alimak Group’s Construction Division, bringing its CAS Common Tower and Atlas gantry systems to a...

CITB announces major funding cuts despite £79m reserves

The Construction Industry Training Board has slashed grants and capped funding from January, citing rising demand but drawing criticism over timing and available reserves. The...

Trapped load drags labourer from scaffold as firms fined £800k

A labourer suffered life-changing injuries after being pulled from scaffolding during an unplanned lifting operation on a London refurbishment project. Two companies have been...

ITP opens new Product Development and Testing Facility at Yorkshire HQ

Yorkshire-based manufacturer ITP Ltd has opened a new Product Development and Testing Facility at its Easingwold headquarters following a major strategic investment. Clive Dickin, Chief...

CISRS reforms face delay as new QAC Chair withdraws

CISRS has reopened its search for a new Chair of the Quality Assurance Committee (QAC) after the organisation confirmed that Professor David Wooff, appointed...

Connolly Scaffolding strengthens partnership with TRAD UK in £3.5m investment

Connolly Scaffolding Ltd has agreed a further £3.5 million investment in TRAD UK’s Plettac Metrix system, reinforcing a partnership that has shaped both businesses...

Benetics introduces AI voice tool to cut site paperwork

A German construction technology firm has launched an AI-powered voice assistant designed to help site teams cut paperwork and speed up reporting. Benetics, based in...

Scaffolders at Sullom Voe Terminal walk out over pay dispute

Around 60 scaffolders, painters, insulators, and supervisors at the Sullom Voe Terminal in the Shetland Islands have staged a 24-hour walkout in an escalating...

Hong Kong contractors ‘hid unsafe scaffolding netting’ as tower fire toll rises to 151

Investigators in Hong Kong say contractors used unsafe scaffolding netting at the housing estate destroyed by last week’s deadly fire, and then tried to...

Costs climb again on Manchester Town Hall project as delays worsen

The cost of restoring Manchester Town Hall has risen by a further £95m, with completion now pushed back to spring 2027. The Grade I-listed...

Latest news

ADVERTISEMENT

The magazine

Issue 27 | Past issues >>

Popular

Trapped load drags labourer from scaffold as firms fined £800k

A labourer suffered life-changing injuries after being pulled from...

Brogan Group and Alimak strike global partnership

Brogan Group has formed a new strategic alliance with...

CISRS reforms face delay as new QAC Chair withdraws

CISRS has reopened its search for a new Chair...

ITP opens new Product Development and Testing Facility at Yorkshire HQ

Yorkshire-based manufacturer ITP Ltd has opened a new Product...

CITB announces major funding cuts despite £79m reserves

The Construction Industry Training Board has slashed grants and...

Related articles

ADVERTISEMENTS

Latest topics

New Construction and Scaffolding Academy launched to tackle skills shortages in Northern Ireland

A new Construction and Scaffolding Academy has been launched...

Brogan Group and Alimak strike global partnership

Brogan Group has formed a new strategic alliance with...

CITB announces major funding cuts despite £79m reserves

The Construction Industry Training Board has slashed grants and...

Trapped load drags labourer from scaffold as firms fined £800k

A labourer suffered life-changing injuries after being pulled from...
ADVERTISEMENTS