A Leicester company has been fined £3,300 for failing to install adequate guarding on an electric gate that trapped a young child at a primary school.
Dudley Magistrates’ Court today heard that an eight-year-old boy was injured when his head became trapped between the edge of the closing gate and the gate post. The youngster suffered significant bruising to the right side of his head and ear.
His father, who witnessed the incident, tried desperately to hold the gate to stop it closing further and managed to pull it open enough to release his son’s head.
An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) into the incident on September 25, 2012, found the entrance gate at Pedmore Primary School in Stourbridge had been automated by Access Control Solutions (UK) Ltd but the company had failed to fit suitable guarding.
The company had identified the need for the guarding but not fitted it because the gate, which had been manufactured by a different company, was not the exact style expected and the guarding would not fit.
Access Control Solutions (UK) Ltd, of Boston Road, Beaumont Leys, Leicester, pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 18 of the Workplace (Health, Safety and Welfare) Regulations 1992 and was fined £3,300 with £773 costs.
After the hearing HSE inspector Sarah Palfreyman said:
“This was an extremely traumatic event for the boy and his father. Fortunately, the youngster was back at school a couple of days later and he has not suffered any long-term effects.”
“Access Control Solutions identified the need for the guard in their own job specification but when the gate arrived, it was not the type expected and the guard did not fit. At this point they should have either come up with an alternative or postponed the job until the problem was rectified.”
“People getting trapped is a well-known risk in the industry and HSE has produced safety notes on the subject due to a number of fatalities involving children in recent years. I would encourage all suppliers and installers of electric gates to read it.”
The boy’s father said: “I had gone to collect him from the after school activity club and he ran towards the gate, which was still open. I told him to stop and wait for me and as he did I saw the gate was closing and was touching his shoulders. Realising the danger I leapt to the gate but by then it was on his head and he was screaming.
“I was pulling it with all my strength. It nearly beat me but managed to pull it enough to get his head out.
“It shook the whole family. My son talks about it now and again. He thinks it was his fault, that he did something wrong. That upsets me as much as the incident itself.”
Guidance of the installation of electrically powered gates and the risks to pedestrians is available at http://www.hse.gov.uk/safetybulletins/electricgates2.htm
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