
Employers are being warned, by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), to ensure they assess workplace machinery risks properly to ensure they have adequate safeguards in place. Warning follows HSE’s prosecution of a fence manufacturing company in Cresswell, Staffordshire after the index finger of a worker’s right hand was sliced off by an unguarded circular saw.
The Fence Factory Ltd was fined a total of £2,000 and ordered to pay costs of £2,645 at Stafford Magistrates’ Court (on 15th May, 2008) after the company pleaded guilty to breaching S3 (1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974. The case followed an HSE investigation into an incident on 21 May 2007 at
Speaking after the case, HSE investigating inspector Wayne Owen said:
"Allowing machines to be operated without suitable and appropriate guards is ignoring basic safety principles, an act which cannot go unpunished.
When operating such machines the level of danger to the operator and other persons nearby cannot be overstated. A high-speed revolving blade, that is sharp enough to slice through wood, is an obvious risk. It is for this reason that extra care must be taken to ensure that the operator is well trained and that the saw is well maintained and properly used. HSE produces a wide range of guidance to assist companies who use woodworking machines to identify risks to themselves and their employees."
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