Two thirds of construction sites visited in Great Britain’s Lincolnshire section during March failed safety inspections. Inspectors from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) carried out checks at nine construction sites during two days of intensive inspections. They issued a total of five enforcement notices, either stopping work immediately or requiring improvements to be made. The majority of the notices covered unsafe work being carried out at height. One site in Lincolnshire is still under investigation with a view toward prosecution.
Richard Lockwood, HSE's Principal Inspector of Construction for the East Midlands said, "The majority of the construction sites our inspectors visited had good health and safety procedures in place. But the other sites are letting the rest of the industry down and putting workers' lives at risk.
"HSE will not tolerate poor health and safety standards on construction sites and we will continue to make unannounced visits and take enforcement action when necessary, until the message gets across. It simply isn't worth taking risks to try and save money.
"Companies have a legal responsibility to protect the lives of workers and site safety should be paramount."
Latest figures from HSE show there were 113 serious injuries on construction sites in Lincolnshire last year. The intensive inspections took place as part of a month-long initiative aimed at stopping dangerous practices on building sites across Great Britain.
HSE wants to raise awareness of construction site risks to prevent deaths and injuries in the future.
Construction is one of Britain's most dangerous industries, with one death and 777 serious injuries in the East Midlands during 2008/9. (workersxzcompxzkit)
Last year inspectors visited 1759 sites and 2145 contractors and were forced to issue more than 270 prohibition notices to stop dangerous work – much of it relating to working from height.
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