Stonemason struck down by silica dust at school

Grant Prior 11 years ago
Share

A private school in Clitheroe has been fined £100,000 after one of its stonemasons developed a potentially fatal lung disease.

The 55-year-old from West Derby, near Liverpool, who has asked not to be named, was employed by Stonyhurst College for almost 12 years where he was exposed to high levels of silica dust.

He was diagnosed with silicosis in July 2011 – four months before being made redundant by the college.

Stonyhurst was prosecuted by the HSE after an investigation found that he and other stonemasons may have been exposed to more than 80 times the daily limit for silica dust.

Preston Crown Court was told the college employed the stonemason as a member of staff in June 1999 as the 200-year-old college buildings needed extensive repairs for wind and weather-proofing.

A second stonemason was employed in April 2005 and a third in January 2009 to help with a major project to build a new four-storey, sixth-form building.

The 21-month project required more than 400 tonnes of sandstone and the stonemasons spent their time working intensively with powered hand tools cutting, shaping, chiselling and finishing the sandstone.

The HSE investigation found Stonyhurst failed to take any measures to monitor or reduce the exposure of workers to silica dust.

The court heard that the college failed to recognise the risks and no equipment was used to remove, capture or supress the dust that was created by the use of the stonemasons’ tools.

Even after the college was notified that one of the stonemasons had developed silicosis in July 2011, it failed to take any action to monitor exposure levels until its two remaining stonemasons were made redundant in November 2011.

The stonemason with silicosis has suffered serious and irreversible health effects as a result of his exposure.

He has a reduced lung function, suffers from breathlessness and can no longer continue with his profession.

Stonyhurst was fined £100,000 and ordered to pay £31,547.78 in prosecution costs after pleading guilty to a safety breach.

Speaking after the hearing, HSE Inspector Mike Mullen said: “Stonyhurst directly employed stonemasons over a 12-year period but it failed to take any action to ensure its employees weren’t exposed to high levels of silica dust.

“During the construction of the sixth-form building, the work of the stonemasons intensified. We estimate that they were regularly exposed to silica dust at a level which was in excess of 80 times greater than the workplace exposure limit.

“There was no attempt by the college to assess and manage its workers’ exposure despite having their attention drawn to the risks by its own health and safety consultant in 2008.

“A worker who was previously very active now struggles to play outside with his grandchildren, and will suffer breathing difficulties for the rest of his life.

“Silicosis is irreversible and can be a fatal disease. It leads to an increased chance of suffering from lung cancer, tuberculosis, kidney disease and arthritis, and it’s therefore vital the risk from silica dust is taken seriously.”

Latest news

Staff stunned as engineering consultancy Clarkebond closes

Firm was only bought three months ago by rival Independent Design House Group
2 days ago

Vistry issues third profit warning in three months

Profit expected to fall £50m below forecast due to delayed completions
2 days ago

Miller Homes buys St Modwen Homes for £215m

Scottish house builder snaps up £368m turnover rival
5 days ago

Keltbray fine increased to £18m after failed bid rigging appeal

Contractor loses penalty discount for settling with competition authorities
6 days ago

Luxury house builder goes under with 70 job losses

Octagon Developments in administration after 40 years in business
6 days ago

Top Ten best read stories of 2024

The biggest headlines of an eventful year. Have a good one and here's to a successful 2025
6 days ago

BAM Nuttall fined £800,000 after concrete skip tragedy

Young labourer killed by falling bale arm
1 week ago

Keltbray infrastructure business reveals new name

AUREOS means "new dawn" after private equity acquisition
6 days ago

Stiffer fines for over-running street works from next Summer

Cash raised from lane rentals to be channeled into pothole repairs
6 days ago

£113m Basildon rental homes scheme seals build finance

Work expected to start early next year on Market Square project
6 days ago

Notting Hill Genesis seeks more tier 1 repairs contractors

London housing trust seeks eight firms for new £1.5bn repairs framework
6 days ago

Reclaimed steel oil rig columns worked into London office revamp

Curo will use reclaimed bricks and steel for Fitzrovia office overhaul
7 days ago

CITB delays levy approval consultation

Levy agreement talks pushed back by ongoing review into effectiveness of training body
7 days ago

Ofwat approves £104bn water industry spending plan

Household water bills to rise by 36% to fund quadrupling of investment
1 week ago

Costain/ Siemens JV clinches HS2 power supply job

£300m deal for HV power supply systems over the 225km route
1 week ago

Demolition team assembles on Multiplex London Wall site

Erith to start work next month at Deutsche Bank's former headquarters
1 week ago

Norwich Council acts to revive £300m Anglia Square scheme

Council uses Homes England funding to buy stalled site with planning for 1,100 homes
1 week ago

Go-ahead for 4,500-home Cambridgeshire new town

Waterbeach new town plan stalled three years ago after an Environment Agency objection
1 week ago

Henry Boot to take total control of Stonebridge Homes

Deal worth at least £30m
1 week ago

HS2 costs could hit £66bn

Government looking for next estimate to be lower
1 week ago

Mace to close construction logistics arm

Specialist business being wound down
1 week ago

National Grid to invest £35bn over next five years

Plan set out for record investment in electricity transmission infrastructure
1 week ago

Profits double at Barhale

Civils specialist sees order book top £1bn
1 week ago

Balfour wins 68km HV underground power cable deal

Main works to start next year on Eastern Green Link 2 job
1 week ago

Stunning site wrap unveiled on Sloane Street

Hoarding creates illusion of fully formed façade on £53m Galliford Try job
1 week ago

Heathrow Airport upgrade spend takes off again

Airport operator will spend £2.3bn over the next two years
1 week ago

Government buys back over 36,000 military homes

Public ownership deal to release wave of upgrade and new build work
1 week ago

Story Contracting staff braced for rail job losses

Work coming through slower than expected from Network Rail
1 week ago

Ballymore submits two plans for 3,700 East London homes

Construction could start in 2025 on Thames Road and Knights Road schemes
1 week ago

Blackpool council steps in on failed developer’s £300m scheme

Blackpool Central site clearance to start in the New Year as hunt starts for new developer
1 week ago

Contractor services