Ad
Saturday, March 7, 2026

Ladder ban lands city council taxpayers with £1m scaffolding bill

ADVERTISEMENT

THE cost of using scaffolding at Stoke-on-Trent’s council houses and public buildings has rocketed by £1 million in just 12 months – after health and safety officials banned ladders.

Kier Stoke had charged the city council £423,000 for the use of scaffolding in 2008/09.

But taxpayers paid out £1.4 million in 2009/10 after Kier Stoke imposed the ladders ban.

It costs £35-a-day to erect scaffolding at a property, with the structures remaining for an average of eight days.

Now council officials are trying to reduce the cost by persuading Kier to use cheaper platform towers.

Tenants and councillors today described the ladders ban as ‘health and safety gone mad’.

City Independents deputy leader Councillor Dave Conway, said: “I’ve warned my wife that if the bathroom light goes we will have to put scaffolding up.

“It’s nonsense. Pensioners whose lights have gone outside their homes have had to wait for scaffolding.

“It’s health and safety gone mad.”

Community Voice councillor Mike Barnes said: “Kier has had a ladder ban across the country since January 2010 after someone fell off a ladder and seriously injured themselves.

“Since then, small jobs are being held up by Kier because they need scaffolding and it costs us £35-a-day.

“There are pensioners who need a new security light which someone six feet tall could put up by hand, who are having to wait six months because scaffolding is needed.”

Tenant David Burton gave up waiting for Kier to change the bulb on the security light outside his home and changed it himself – after standing on his tip-toes.

The 37-year-old, of Blurton, said: “I live in a ground-floor flat and don’t get home from work until 11pm, so I need the light.

“After three weeks waiting I phoned the council and they said there was a ladder ban so they would have to use scaffolding.

“But if I stood on my tip-toes I could reach it myself.

“In the end I bought a bulb and changed it myself and it works fine. Kier came out five weeks after I called them but by then it was too late.”

Council officials today described the £1.4 million bill as a ‘significant amount’.

A spokesman said: “The money was spent to provide safe access to roofs, windows and guttering to carry out necessary housing repairs through our contractor Kier.

“We are working with Kier to reduce this cost by introducing new safe and efficient methods of access like platform towers rather than scaffolding.

“We are confident that we can carry on reducing the cost with wider use of platform towers.”

Via: www.thisisstaffordshire.co.uk

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest news

Construction industry says Spring Statement lacked measures to boost building

Construction leaders have offered a mixed response to Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ Spring Statement, with industry bodies warning that the government missed an opportunity to...

ScaffPlan partners with Leach’s to expand access to scaffold design software

ScaffPlan has formed a strategic partnership with Leach’s, the UK’s largest supplier of scaffolding consumables and equipment, in a move designed to widen access...

Training provider reports disruption as Gulf tensions escalate

The escalating conflict in the Middle East is beginning to affect construction and safety training activity, with early disruption reported to training schedules in...

Subcontractors stay upbeat despite seven-year low in project volumes

Subcontractors across the UK and Ireland remain optimistic about the year ahead despite a tightening construction pipeline, according to a new annual report from...

Doka supports Denmark’s Storstrøm Bridge as 3.8km crossing nears completion

Denmark’s new Storstrøm Bridge is entering its final construction phase, with the 3.8km crossing set to become the country’s third-longest bridge when it opens...

If we achieve AGI, will we still need scaffolding?

Many scaffold firms worldwide are already using AI to analyse inspection records, flag anomalies, and reduce the administrative burden for site managers. It is...

IASA strengthens Asian presence as Taiwan and South Korea join global body

The International Access & Scaffolding Association has announced that the Taiwan Scaffold Development Association and the Korea Temporary Equipment & Engineering Association have joined...

Labour’s 1.5 million homes target faces scaffolder shortage warning

Labour’s pledge to build 1.5 million new homes over the course of this Parliament is facing fresh pressure amid warnings of a shortage of...

Subcontractor pay dips as weather hits sites but wider pressures loom

Self-employed tradespeople earned an average of £1,000 per week in January, according to analysis by Hudson Contract, which manages the industry’s largest payroll for...

Band of Builders releases six-month project list to boost volunteer support

Construction charity Band of Builders has released a six-month schedule of upcoming projects, aimed at encouraging tradespeople to commit time in advance. The registered charity...

Latest news

Magazine

Winter Issue #28 | Past issues >>

Popular

Subcontractors stay upbeat despite seven-year low in project volumes

Subcontractors across the UK and Ireland remain optimistic about...

Training provider reports disruption as Gulf tensions escalate

The escalating conflict in the Middle East is beginning...

ScaffPlan partners with Leach’s to expand access to scaffold design software

ScaffPlan has formed a strategic partnership with Leach’s, the...

Construction industry says Spring Statement lacked measures to boost building

Construction leaders have offered a mixed response to Chancellor...

Doka supports Denmark’s Storstrøm Bridge as 3.8km crossing nears completion

Denmark’s new Storstrøm Bridge is entering its final construction...

Related articles

Latest topics

NASC warns scaffolding skills gap could leave 40,000 roles to fill

NASC has warned the UK scaffolding and access sector...

Construction industry says Spring Statement lacked measures to boost building

Construction leaders have offered a mixed response to Chancellor...

ScaffPlan partners with Leach’s to expand access to scaffold design software

ScaffPlan has formed a strategic partnership with Leach’s, the...

Training provider reports disruption as Gulf tensions escalate

The escalating conflict in the Middle East is beginning...
ADVERTISEMENTS