Company “showed a total disregard to keeping its workers safe”
A London property developer has been fined £63,000 after safety inspectors slapped nine enforcement notices on a construction site in east London.
Nofax Enterprises Limited was investigated by the HSE following four visits to its site on Dalston Lane over a 13 month period between 2020 and 2021. The company was overseeing the construction of a four storey building on the site, containing nine flats and large basement to house a youth club.
Failures identified by HSE inspectors – including multiple working at height risks, poor fire precautions and exposure to large amounts of silica dust – were so serious, that they resulted in the site being closed down on two separate occasions.
Other breaches of the law included failing to protect workers from exposure to wood dust, as well as insufficient covid and welfare controls.
In total nine enforcement notices were served against the company for the Dalston Lane site, including five prohibition notices. The subsequent HSE investigation included inspections at other sites operated by the company, identifying a poor health and safety culture and systemic management failings.
Nofax Enterprises Limited, of Maldon, Essex pleaded guilty to safety breaches at Southwark Crown Court and was ordered to pay a total of £88,812.68 which included a fine of £63,000, costs of £25,622.
In summing up, the judge stated that despite repeated visits by HSE and multiple notices being served, risks subsisted over a long period and the company failed to make any appropriate changes. The judge concluded by saying that there had been a systemic failure within the organisation to manage health and safety.
After the hearing, HSE inspector Gordon Nixon said: “This company showed a total disregard to keeping its workers safe.
“They failed to meet even the most basic health and safety standards, continually exposing operatives to serious risks.
“HSE will not wait until workers are seriously injured, or worse and will take appropriate action including prosecutions when health and safety regulations are so blatantly flouted.”