HSE inspectors visited the company's premises 4 times between February 2017 and July 2023 and identified numerous health and safety breaches. HSE's investigation found the company had: not maintained work equipment allowed staff to operate Computer Numerical Control (CNC) machines with safety panels removed, allowing access to dangerous moving parts done little to prevent employees from being exposed to water-mix metal working fluid mist, a known cause of occupational asthma and occupational hypersensitivity pneumonitis Read this press release about the motorsport engineering firm being fined. It also provides full details of the incident. HSE recently ran a campaign to highlight the dangers from metalworking fluids. View our campaign guidance and resources. Other recent enforcement cases include: 3 companies fined over 290,000 as worker injured at tyre factory Individuals and company sentenced after woman catapulted from fairground ride HSE issues MoD (the Army) with Crown Censure following death of soldier HSE's Asbestos Your Duty campaign highlights the risk of asbestos in buildings and raises awareness of the legal duty to manage those risks. HSE's website has guidance on the duty to manage. It includes: what the legal duty is, and the steps required to comply with the law who the dutyholder is, depending on the type of building etc, and what they must do new templates of an asbestos management plan and an asbestos register with a site plan examples of how asbestos can be managed across different industries The latest episode of the HSE podcast is to support those with a legal duty to manage asbestos in their buildings. The episode discusses the risks of asbestos and the steps to managing asbestos effectively in non-domestic buildings. It features the Group Property Asbestos Manager at Marks and Spencer, who shares practical examples of how the retailer manages asbestos across its estate. Listen to the Asbestos Your Duty podcast Recent incidents have highlighted the potential for serious personal injury during the deployment and use of motion compensated gangways. Windfarm operators, installation dutyholders and vessel owners or operators who are using, planning to use or operating motion compensated gangways must ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, that the system is safe and suitable for the purpose for which it is being provided. HSE has identified required actions that dutyholders should take: assess risk ensure any gangway auto-retraction provides suitable audible and visual warnings deliver instruction and training establish an inspection and maintenance regime Read our motion compensated gangways safety notice for more details |