Scaffolding Firm Fined After Scaffolder Falls From Ladder

ADVERTISEMENT

HSE: Builder Sentenced

A Birmingham firm has been fined after a worker suffered life-changing injuries in a two-metre fall from a ladder while constructing scaffolding for the set of a television programme.

Craig Shakespeare, 49, of Birmingham, sustained serious foot injuries in the incident at The Bond on Fazeley Street, Birmingham, on 25 March 2013. He is now reliant on a wheelchair and has been unable to work since.

Mr Shakespeare was working for Solihull-based Swan Scaffolding Contractors Limited, which was today (8 May) prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) for failing to ensure sufficient measures were in place to prevent or mitigate the fall.

Birmingham Magistrates’ Court heard the company was building the supporting scaffold to hold a theatrical set in place.

Mr Shakespeare was working from a ladder to attach supporting scaffold to the back of the wooden set. As he pulled a fixture on the set towards the scaffold the fixture came away and he lost his balance.

He realised he was about to fall and jumped from the ladder, but landed heavily on his feet, badly breaking both heels.

HSE established a tower scaffold or elevated work platform should have been used instead of a ladder, as readily-available guidance clearly states. The court was told that had more suitable access equipment been used, the incident could have been avoided.

Swan Scaffolding Contractors Limited, of Knowle, Solihull, pleaded guilty to breaching regulation 4(1) of the Work at Height Regulations 2005 and was fined £5,000 and ordered to pay £535 in costs and a £500 victim surcharge.

After the hearing, HSE inspector Edward Fryer said:

“The danger of using ladders should not be underestimated.  This is another example of serious injuries being sustained where other access equipment could have been used instead. 

“A tower scaffold was available and should have been used. As a scaffolding company, Swan Scaffolding should be experts in access and working at height. They know it is a high-risk activity, and they should know what measures to put in place to keep workers safe.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest posts

Founders step away as City Access Scaffolding completes buyout

From Left to Right: Ryan Scott, Mark Skinner, and Ross Archibald

JMAC completes first acquisition with Tees Site Support deal

JMAC Industrial and Access Group Ltd has acquired a majority shareholding in Tees Site Support Ltd, marking the company’s first acquisition as it looks...

Final 20 teams confirmed for ScaffChamp 2026

The final 20 teams competing at ScaffChamp powered by Layher 2026 have been confirmed, with the last place secured after a qualification event in...

£27bn road strategy opens major pipeline for specialist contractors

The government has confirmed Roads Investment Strategy 3 (RIS3), a £27 billion programme covering England's motorway and A-road network through to 2031. A record £8.4...

NASC expands regional leadership as membership rises 40%

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has announced a series of new regional chair and vice chair appointments as part of a wider...

Layher UK launches ‘Sizzle & Learn’ open morning series for 2026

Layher UK has announced a series of open morning events aimed at giving customers and partners direct access to its latest systems, product developments...

Two taken to hospital after building collapse in Oldham

Two people have been taken to hospital after a building partially collapsed in Oldham town centre. Emergency services were called to King Street at about...

Scafom-rux delivers Manchester’s tallest ground-based scaffold

In the heart of Manchester’s financial district, a major high-rise development is setting new benchmarks for construction scaffolding in the UK. For this complex...

Teen scaffolding labourer dies after fall through shaft on London site

A construction company has been fined after a teenage scaffolding labourer died in a fall from height on a London building site. Renols Lleshi, 19,...

Government launches consultation on plan to merge CITB and ECITB

The UK government has launched a consultation on proposals to merge the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB) and the Engineering Construction Industry Training Board...

Latest news

Magazine

Spring Issue #29 | Past issues >>

Trending now ⚡︎

Teen scaffolding labourer dies after fall through shaft on London site

A construction company has been fined after a teenage...

Two taken to hospital after building collapse in Oldham

Two people have been taken to hospital after a...

NASC expands regional leadership as membership rises 40%

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has announced...

Government launches consultation on plan to merge CITB and ECITB

The UK government has launched a consultation on proposals...

Layher UK launches ‘Sizzle & Learn’ open morning series for 2026

Layher UK has announced a series of open morning...

Related articles

Latest topics

Scaffolding sector joins April Fools’ Day with wave of industry jokes

Scaffolding companies and industry figures have taken to social...

Founders step away as City Access Scaffolding completes buyout

From Left to Right: Ryan Scott, Mark Skinner, and Ross Archibald

JMAC completes first acquisition with Tees Site Support deal

JMAC Industrial and Access Group Ltd has acquired a...

Final 20 teams confirmed for ScaffChamp 2026

The final 20 teams competing at ScaffChamp powered by...
ADVERTISEMENTS