Jan 162012
 

Two men have been jailed for a total of 18 months for taking health and safety tests on behalf of other construction workers to gain skills cards.

The case is being highlighted by CITB-ConstructionSkills who warned any other fraudsters could expect to feel the full force of the law.

Gurpreet Singh and Parampreet Singh were both convicted last week after pleading guilty at Luton Crown Court.

They had been caught by staff at CITB-ConstructionSkills’ test centre in Luton, Bedfordshire, and were sentenced to nine months each.

CITB-ConstructionSkills’ product delivery manager Chris Little, said that staff discovered the fraud, known as proxy testing, after realising the men had taken multiple tests using several other workers’ identification passes which bore their own photographs.

He said: “Both men were being paid to take the test by other candidates, and it soon became clear to us that the same men were taking the test for other people each time.

CITB-ConstructionSkills Chief Executive Mark Farrar condemned the practice.

He said: “I’m glad the vigilance of CITB-ConstructionSkills staff caught and put a stop to this illegal activity.We support the industry by continually investigating test fraud, and we take it very seriously indeed.

“Proxy testing is self-defeating because it both endangers the lives of the people who solicit it and their colleagues on construction sites.

“Those who are found to be proxy testing will be reported to the police and could face prosecution.”

Both men are foreign nationals and will be deported once they have served their sentences.

Jan 092012
 

Nationwide – free quality advice and information; helping you run a successful business.

Business Advice Open Days are the largest cross government business support road-shows of their kind, dedicated to providing free information and support to your business.

What support is available?

  • full team of experts at each event
  • advice and support – health and safety, starting a new business, business growth…
  • help to understand and meet legal requirements
  • enhance your business – funding, marketing and new technology.

Events near you

Location Date Venue
Birmingham Tuesday 10 January 2012 Birmingham and Midland Institute, 9 Margaret Street, Birmingham B3 38S
Altrincham Thursday 12 January 2012 Altrincham Town Hall, Market Street, Altrincham, Cheshire, WA14 1PG
Cardiff Tuesday 17 January 2012 Cardiff Masonic Hall, 8 Guildford Street, Cardiff CF10 2HL
Rotherham Thursday 19 January 2012 The Source at Meadowhall, 300 Meadowhall Way, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S9 1EA
Milton Keynes Thursday 26 January 2012 Acorn House, 381 Midsummer Boulevard, Milton Keynes MK9 3HP
Hounslow Thursday 2 February 2012 St Giles Hotel, Hounslow Road, Feltham TW14 9AD
Stafford Tuesday 7 February 2012 The Pavillion, Branston Golf & Country Club, Burton Road, Branston, Burton-On-Trent DE14 3DP
Chorley Wednesday 8 February 2012 Park Hall Hotel, Park Hall Road, Charnock Richard, Chorley, Lancashire PR7 5LP
Banbury Thursday 9 February 2012 Mercure Banbury Whately Hall Hotel, 17-19 Horse Fair, Banbury Cross, Banbury OX16 0AN
King Lynn Wednesday 22 February 2012 The Town Hall, Saturday Market Place, King’s Lynn, Norfolk, PE30 5DQ
Greater London (Wembley) Friday 24 February 2012 The Grand Union Village Community Facility, Weaver House, 6 Higham Mews, Northolt UB5 6FP
Jan 092012
 

The Prime Minister has pledged to slay the ‘health and safety monster’ that is ‘strangling’ business.

David Cameron yesterday unveiled plans to cut red tape and prevent ambulance-chasing lawyers from cashing in on personal injury claims.

And he launched an attack on the ‘chancers’ who try to ‘leech’ off companies by seeking compensation for minor accidents.Prime Minister today vowed to make 2012 the year when ‘we kill off the health and safety culture for good’.

In future, the maximum amount lawyers can pocket from health and safety cases will be capped, with some getting as little as £400 for a single case.

Ministers want to stamp out the gravy train which allows some legal firms to pocket fees of £50,000 or more for fighting minor personal injury claims that pay claimants just a few hundred pounds.

These cases cost businesses billions each year in legal fees and hugely expensive insurance policies to protect themselves from vexatious claims.

David Cameron will not reverse the current plan of government cutbacks

Many arrange settlements with employees rather than risk the punitive legal fees that losing a case would bring.

Mr Cameron made the announcement in his first public appearance of the year, designed to show that the Government is making economic growth its priority.

The Prime Minister said he wanted to tackle legal fees in ‘no win, no fee’ cases because health and safety legislation has become an ‘albatross around the neck of British businesses’.

‘Building our economy up to strength requires a real pioneering, risk-taking spirit – and today we are smothering it in bubble wrap and red tape,’ he warned.

‘This must stop. So one of the Coalition’s New Year resolutions is this: kill off the health and safety culture for good. Our plans will deter the speculative health and safety chancers and those who leech off good businesses.

‘So what we’re going to be doing is to say that for claims up to £25,000 we’re going to cap the fees that lawyers can earn from those claims.

‘I think that will take a lot of the fear out of the health and safety monster and make sure that businesses feel they can get on and plan and invest and grow without feeling they’ll be strangled by red tape and health and safety regulation, which is very, very important for the future of our economy.’

An existing fixed costs scheme in England and Wales, which limits lawyers’ fees from personal injury claims worth under £10,000 resulting from road traffic accidents, will be extended to cover claims against employers. It will also be expanded to cover cases where the compensation payout is up to £25,000.

The current scheme caps legal costs at a fixed amount dependent on the number of stages needed to settle the case. If a defendant admits liability, the winning claimant’s lawyer can charge no more than £400 to handle the case.

Under the plans, Mr Cameron will also meet the bosses of Britain’s leading insurance companies at a Downing Street summit next month to ensure that businesses are not paying too much for cover that goes far beyond what is required by law.

The Government has already announced plans to change the health and safety law on strict liability for civil claims so that businesses are no longer automatically at fault if something goes wrong.

Ministers believe firms are too often held responsible even if they have done everything they can to prevent an accident. Speaking in Maidenhead, Berkshire, the Prime Minister added: ‘The key thing about health and safety is it’s not just the laws and rules and regulations, it’s also the culture of fear that many businesses have about health and safety.’

But Richard Jones, head of policy and public affairs at the Institution of Occupational Safety and Health, said: ‘Labelling workplace health and safety as a monster is appalling and unhelpful, as the reason our legislative system exists is to prevent death, injury or illness at work.

 

Jan 092012
 

The 91-year-old was banned from  sitting in the cockpit of a museum’s Spitfire… because officials feared it was too risky.

He was stunned to be told the fighter had been given a facelift with paint containing tiny traces of radioactive radium and had no ‘proper seat’.

Mr Carter said: ‘You couldn’t make it up. I used to fly those things every day fighting the Germans.

‘Now that really was a health and safety concern, let me tell you!’

The former pilot was invited to the Potteries Museum and Art Gallery in Stoke-on-Trent to look at the type of Spitfire in which he flew top secret missions in Russia.

He is the last surviving member of a clandestine group known as Force Benedict, which protected the crucial port of Murmansk following the invasion by Nazi Germany in 1941.

‘I had to laugh to think I couldn’t sit in a stationary Spitfire in case I got hurt,’ said the veteran from Worcester.

‘I just wish the Luftwaffe had been so caring.’

A spokesman for Stoke council said without a seat and with the paint used, it was ‘thought best’ to stop Mr Carter from climbing in because of his age.

 

Jan 092012
 

The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) has issued a fresh warning about workplace safety following a rise in the number people who suffered a major injury while at work in Pembrokeshire last year.

According to the latest statistics, there were 60 major injuries in the county during 2010/11 compared with 55 in 2009/10.

Another 125 workers suffered an injury or ill health which required them to take at least three days off work in 2010/11 compared to 133 in the previous year.

Nick O’Connor, principal inspector for the HSE in Wales, said: “These 60 workers in Pembrokeshire have had their lives changed forever by a major injury.

“These statistics highlight why we need good health and safety in British workplaces.

Employers need to spend their time tackling the real dangers that workers face and stop worrying about trivial risks or doing pointless paperwork.

“It’s important to remember that we still have one of the lowest rates of workplace deaths in Europe, but one death is still one too many.

“I would urge businesses to focus on helping to cut the number of deaths in 2012.”