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Workers exposed to asbestos at Derby building site
A building boss has been given 300 hours community service for
exposing workers to asbestos in Derby.
Wayne Priestley, 47, of The Beeches, Lincoln Road, Tuxford,
Nottinghamshire, had been subcontracted to remove
asbestos-containing materials from the former Allens Printers
building in Webster Street ahead of its demolition.
Quarnmill Construction, the principal contractor on the site,
provided a survey of the building to Mr Priestley detailing the
location of the asbestos. The survey stated that in several places
a licensed contractor was required to remove some of the material.
Quarnmill Construction has already been fined £13,000 for its health
and safety failings in this case.
Mr Priestley assured Quarnmill the asbestos removal was within
his capability, yet he had no licence to carry out this type of
work. Interviewed by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), which
investigated his safety failings, Mr Priestley denied seeing that
particular instruction within the survey.
HSE found that between 6 and 9 October 2009 Mr Priestley used
two of his employees from a local amenity site that he managed,
plus two men he had met socially, to carry out the work. He took
them to the site on the first day and gave them some basic
instructions, but did not remain to supervise the work. Neither did
he share the contents of the asbestos survey with them.
He left them with a crowbar, overalls and masks, all of which
were inadequate for the task.
The stripped material was first put in a small, open skip, but
was then transferred to a sealed skip to be taken away. This meant
the workers handled asbestos twice during the removal process.
It also resulted in the driver of the skip removal lorry being
exposed to asbestos fibres as the material he collected was not
appropriately identified or wrapped.
The HSE investigation also found that no risk assessment was
carried out before work started. Mr Priestley only provided one to
Quarnmill afterwards.
An HSE scientist revealed the Webster Street site was badly
contaminated by asbestos debris, and large fragments of asbestos
insulating board remained stuck to walls and ceilings where panels
had been broken away during the removal work.
"Asbestos is the single greatest cause of work-related deaths in
the UK. Employers need to protect their workers now to prevent them
contracting an asbestos-related disease in the future.
"The health effects to all these men may not be known for
decades as the life-threatening conditions that asbestos exposure
can lead to can take a long time to develop."
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