A dangerous precedent

A dangerous precedent

In February?2016, the boiler house of the Didcot A Power Station partially collapsed, claiming the lives of four demolition workers.??The investigation into that incident remains ongoing.

In September 2019, two men were killed on a demolition site at Redcar in horrific circumstances.??That investigation also remains ongoing.

On Thursday 29 September 2022, a demolition worker was killed on a site in Esher in Surrey.??And there is now a very real possibility that his family, friends, loved ones and colleagues could be waiting until 2029 to find out how and why.

On the night of 23 February 2016, I was asked by Sky News to meet one of their reporters at the site of the Didcot A Power Station.??I agreed with a single caveat – I would not comment on the actual cause of the boiler house collapse because no-one knew precisely what that cause had been.??With that proviso in place, I set about doing my homework to ensure that I was prepared for my TV interview.??And one of the key items contained within that homework was an admission from the Health and Safety Executive that it was (in 2016) taking as much as four years to investigate a fatal industrial accident.

Armed with that nugget of information, I confidently predicted that we would be unlikely to have any resolution to the Didcot Disaster much before 2020.??It turns out I was at least two years wide of the mark.

The concern now is that Didcot has set a new precedent; that the expected four-year investigation period has now been extended to seven and – perhaps – beyond.

Even allowing for the two years lost to COVID-19 and the ensuing lockdown, the time taken to analyse the causes of the Didcot and Redcar fatalities is nothing short of a disgrace.??And it is made worse by the knowledge that in the US – perhaps the UK demolition industry’s closest cousin – a fatal accident can be investigated and prosecuted in just six months.

On the sixth anniversary of the Didcot Disaster, I returned to the site for the final time and found it transformed.??In fact, the road layout has altered so much that I initially got lost.

At the Teesworks site in Redcar where two men perished in September 2019, the local mayor has become a regular on local and national TV stations where he talks about giga-factories, freeport status and new jobs for the area.

The site in Esher where the demolition man tragically lost his life last week has already been reopened.

As I have been told countless times since the passing of my mother in January this year and my father in September, life goes on.??It does.??I am still here, and I am still functioning.

But for the families, friends and colleagues of those killed at Didcot, Redcar and Esher, that life is altered.??The date of their passing will bring fresh grief and fresh anger that their deaths remain unexplained.??The town of their passing will be forever tainted with painful memories.

And all of that is being wilfully exacerbated by an accident investigation process that is now so protracted and overlong that the shock of the original accident is largely forgotten by the public and the industry long before any findings are revealed.

Despite these and other fatal accidents, I still firmly believe that the UK demolition is among the very best in the world.??But based on these cases, I firmly believe that the protocols and regimes in place to police and manage the sector’s health and safety are now among the worst.

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Mark Anthony is the founder of DemolitionNews.com.

Robert Wild

Demolition high reach plant op at Euro Demolition & Dismantling Ltd

2 年

Such a length of time desined to lesson the urgency make it less important make people feel its not Such a big thing then a small fine and a slap on the wrist i hope I'm wrong but i doubt it god bless em

This must NEVER be the case.!!!??????????????????

Keith Fletcher

Tender and Projects Coordinator at CLEVELAND CABLE COMPANY LIMITED

2 年

HSE is clearly not fit for purpose. This is a disgusting amount of time to be sat shuffling bits of paper. Not one person investigating this will have lost a moments sleep on it. If they had ... we would have had a resolution to this. It’s not even about fines (something the HSE is far too keen on). It’s about closure (and perhaps justice) for the families. It’s about learning how it went so wrong under solid design processes and one of the best HS systems I’ve ever seen and it’s about making sure it never happens again.

Ann Lynch Mackay

Social Care Worker at The City of Edinburgh Council

2 年

Thank you for highlighting how difficult this is for us families ?? I think you are doing an amazing Job Mark. I am totally amazed that a Top tier COMAH site can be flattened, demolished and scrapped in less than the time it takes the police and HSE to take statements!! The amount of money planning and resources that the clearing of such a site would take. And yet two hard working men are gone their life’s have tragically ended and still we wait…. There are no real reasons or answers as to WHY these investigations take so long… it’s only when you lose someone we love in such a horrendous and tragic way that we realise, how shocking and disgusting the way these investigations are being handled The immense pain and suffering is exacerbated with all the very unnecessary and unacceptable delays of the investigation. The law needs to change! It’s truly heartbreaking when someone goes to work and is killed through absolutely no fault of their own and it takes years for answers. We as families should not have to constantly fight and struggle for answers or justice. Things need to change. We may not be big investors or politicians but we have LOVE and respect we will never give up.

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