Ad
Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Scaffolding Firm Fined 30K After Scaffolder’s Fall

ADVERTISEMENT
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

By Daniel Norton

Fred Lewis Scaffolding Ltd has been prosecuted after a scaffolder fell seven metrers through a roof in Stoke-on-Trent.

Father of three Gary Hampton,28, had been erecting scaffolding at a factory in Plantation Road, Newstead Industrial Estate, when he fell through the fragile roof breaking two vertebrae in his back, broke both wrists and shattered his thigh bone.

He was hospitalised for 6 weeks and will never be able to carry out manual work again.

The investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that Fred Lewis Scaffolding had not surveyed the job properly from the start and failed to supervise or train its employees adequately.

The firm whose office is registered in West Bromwich, pleaded guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 and was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay £19,000 costs.

HSE inspector Alastair Choudhury said:

“This case highlights both the dangers of working on fragile roofs and the continual exposure of scaffolders to the risk of falling from height.

“It is very sad that a man with a family to support is now unable to work as a result of an entirely preventable incident. If Fred Lewis Scaffold Company had carried out an adequate survey of this job before starting work and supervised and trained its employees properly, the risks involved would have been identified.

“Falls from height remain the biggest cause of deaths within the construction industry, and this incident could easily have been fatal. HSE will continue to deal robustly with poorly performing companies in this area.

“Guidance on working safely at height, which includes how to identify and mitigate risks, is available free from HSE. We also undertake major work programmes to communicate safe practices to groups at risk in the industry, including scaffolders.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Popular Categories

Latest posts

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...

Robotics firm KEWAZO secures $35m backing to scale industrial lifting technology

KEWAZO, a robotics company focused on heavy industry, has raised $35m in funding to accelerate the rollout of its lifting robot across global industrial...

Pay gap pushing scaffolders from New Zealand to Australia

Construction firms in New Zealand are facing a growing shortage of scaffolders as experienced workers move to Australia in search of higher wages and...

Barking Riverside expansion approved to deliver up to 20,000 homes

Revised outline plans for the Barking Riverside development in east London have been approved by the London Borough of Barking & Dagenham, enabling a...

Beyond the Hype: Where AI Actually Delivers Value for a Scaffold Business

AI can draft a site report in seconds, but it cannot plumb a standard or assume legal accountability. Scaffold businesses operate in a world...

New data shows construction workforce becoming younger and more skilled

New data from the Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS) suggests the profile of the UK construction workforce is changing, with more young people entering...

Teen in coma after scaffolding accident on Fife housing project

A teenager remains in a coma after being seriously injured by falling scaffolding material while working at a housing block in Kirkcaldy. Brodie Thomson, 16,...

NASC gains formal role in CITB levy consensus process

The National Access and Scaffolding Confederation (NASC) has been granted Prescribed Organisation status by the Construction Industry Training Board (CITB), giving the trade body...

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...

Teen in coma after scaffolding accident on Fife housing project

A teenager remains in a coma after being seriously...

Robotics firm KEWAZO secures $35m backing to scale industrial lifting technology

KEWAZO, a robotics company focused on heavy industry, has...

New data shows construction workforce becoming younger and more skilled

New data from the Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS)...

Barking Riverside expansion approved to deliver up to 20,000 homes

Revised outline plans for the Barking Riverside development in...

Related articles

Latest topics

Two taken to hospital after building collapse in Oldham

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

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

In the heart of Manchester’s financial district, a major...

Teen scaffolding labourer dies after fall through shaft on London site

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

Government launches consultation on plan to merge CITB and ECITB

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