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28 April 2025

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HAVS diagnoses leads to £140k fine

16 Apr A social housing provider has been fined £140,000 after employees were exposed to risks from vibrating tools.

Stonewater Limited was in the dock after two employees were diagnosed with debilitating hand arm vibration syndrome (HAVS).

The two men were diagnosed with HAVS in July 2023 following repeated exposure to vibration.

They worked as estate assistants at various Stonewater sites near Tanyard Farm in Coventry. Between 2018 and 2023, their roles required them to undertake ground maintenance activities, including grass cutting, hedge trimming, litter picking and weeding. The extensive use of lawn mowers, leaf blowers, strimmers and hedge cutters exposed both men to vibration. One of the men estimated that he used this equipment for 90% of his working day.

One of the affected, Christopher Smith, aged 60 from Coventry, said: 鈥淚 have lost my fine motor skills and experience significant difficulty in picking up small objects, using a knife and fork, or even doing up buttons. The pain keeps me up at night. I am unable to pick up my younger grandchildren to hold them. It is not only not having the ability to do this, but I am terrified I will drop them, and I don鈥檛 trust myself.鈥

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An investigation by HSE found that Stonewater had failed to undertake a risk assessment in relation to vibration. The company did not ensure that vibration exposure was regularly and accurately recorded聽 to reduce the risks from vibration to as low as practicable. There was also no information, instruction or training provided to the employees on vibration, nor had the company implemented a suitable system of health surveillance.

Stonewater Limited of Whetstone, Leicester, pleaded guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. It was fined 拢140,000 and ordered to pay costs of 拢3,742 at Birmingham Magistrates鈥 Court on 14th April 2025.

Lead HSE inspector Charlie Rowe said: 鈥淭his is a tragic case and the fine imposed on Stonewater Limited underlines that the courts, and HSE, take a failure to follow health and safety regulations extremely seriously. HAVS is a serious and disabling health condition and we will not hesitate to take action against employers that fall below the required standard.鈥

Stonewater鈥檚 director of building safety and compliance, Sarah Stevenson-Jones, said after the judgment: 鈥淪tonewater is committed to ensuring the health, safety and well-being of every employee, customer, stakeholder and supply chain partner. We respect the thoroughness, transparency and even-handedness of the HSE enquiry and are committed to making sure it adds to our learning. We will continue to implement stringent health and safety controls and aim for the highest standards to ensure no such instance is repeated in future.鈥

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