March 4, 2017

Heritage work revives demand for old skills

Old skills, young shoulders: Stephen Graham, lead worker and slater Stephen Graham has become accustomed to the heights but lugging a roll of lead weighing 140kg across a roof, even with a colleague, is hard work. Yet Mr Graham, 25, now has enviable job security as a lead worker and

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Plastics manufacturer fined for death of worker

A plastics manufacturer from Cambridgeshire has been fined and given a suspended sentence after a worker died after she was crushed by printing machinery. Peterborough Crown Court heard how a 23-year-old agency worker from Lithuania was working in a print room for Gordon Leach, who trades as RGE Engineering Company.

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W H Bowker Unveils Plans to Acquire Potter Logistics

Logistics firm W H Bowker Ltd has revealed plans to acquire the warehousing and transport operations at five sites belonging to Potter Logistics Ltd. The deal, completed for an undisclosed sum, will see Preston- and Hull-based W H Bowker purchase Potter’s operations in Knowsley, Droitwich, Selby, Ripon and York. Moving

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Issue 324 : Jan 2025

March 4, 2017

Heritage work revives demand for old skills

Old skills, young shoulders: Stephen Graham, lead worker and slater Stephen Graham has become accustomed to the heights but lugging a roll of lead weighing 140kg across a roof, even with a colleague, is hard work. Yet Mr Graham, 25, now has enviable job security as a lead worker and slater. “Everybody is saying, ‘Are you watching this? You’ll be doing it all yourself one day’.” More On this topic IN UK Business & Economy Work on Britain’s rich legacy of heritage buildings is thriving, giving craftsmen with specialist skills all the work they can handle. “There are not a lot of people getting the training I have,” said Mr Graham, who is learning from workmates, all a generation older than him. But there, amid the boom in heritage renovation, lies a familiar problem: a looming skills crisis as tradesmen in their 50s and 60s, the mainstay of the sector, approach retirement and not enough younger people inherit their knowledge. “In 10 years’ time, skilled heritage masons will be like early 1990s plumbers in London — there will be so few of them they will be naming their price,” said Richard Pavlou, operations manager of Stone Technical Services Group (STS), a specialist in high-rise maintenance including lightning protection and steeplejack work. In 2005, the National Heritage Training Group estimated the built heritage sector needed 6,500 additional craftspeople. Yet the number of apprentices and trainees in heritage-related craft skills dropped 78 per cent from 2005 to 4,526 in 2013-14. Cathie Clarke, general manager at the NHTG, said: “General knowledge and understanding of old buildings and solid-wall construction is missing.” The problem, she added, was that heritage training was not mainstream. In 10 years’ time, skilled heritage masons will be like early 1990s plumbers in London — there will be so few of them they will be naming their price – Richard Pavlou, Stone Technical Services Group Contractors say key shortages include lime plasterers, heritage slaters to mend roofs and steeplejacks, who scale objects such as church spires, industrial chimneys and clock towers. There is also a supply-chain shortage of blacksmiths, who are needed to sharpen the picks used to hole slates. Training courses and qualifications are available but much of the specialist learning has to be on the job. The heritage sector is not just about landmarks and listed buildings. There are more than 5.4m pre-1919 buildings in England alone. Most are not listed but they still require specialist knowledge and skills to be maintained. Indeed, pre-1919 buildings comprise one in five of all the UK’s stock. The sector is “extremely buoyant”, said Alan Chapman, heritage director at Matthew Charlton Slaters — Mr Graham’s employer — which is working on buildings ranging from Durham Cathedral and National Trust properties to private houses. The business, now a subsidiary of the Northern Bear building services group, dates back to 1842. “It really started to pick up coming out of recession in 2012,” he said. Mr Pavlou of STS, whose workload includes the Royal Courts of Justice in London and the Forth Road Bridge, concurred. “We are absolutely flat out at the moment,” he said. Heritage businesses say the increase in work stems from a greater awareness of the importance of looking after older buildings properly allied to an increase in grant aid from bodies such as the Heritage Lottery Fund. The workload has also been increased by extreme weather, such as the recent bouts of flooding, and the need to rectify botched repairs carried out by non-specialists using potentially damaging materials, such as cement rather than lime mortar. The UK has a vast inherited wealth of heritage buildings. Graeme Millar, managing director of Scotland-based heritage roofing specialist Bain & Irvine and vice-president of the International Federation for the Roofing Trade, says his European counterparts are “in awe” at the range and quality. These buildings not only shape the country’s character and sense of identity, they are economically highly significant, too. According to Historic England’s Heritage Counts 2015 report, built heritage tourism directly accounted for £5.1bn of UK GDP in 2011, while repair and maintenance of historic buildings, including supply chain purchases, generated £11bn in England alone. In 2014, there were 66.7m visits to heritage sites. Slating in our country is always looked upon as a poor man’s trade. But slating in Germany, in particular, is viewed as a real skill. Young people are clamouring to get into it – Graeme Millar, Bain & Irvine The Heritage Lottery Fund spent £221.4m in 2014-15 on building works, and its spending for the next fiscal year is expected to be even higher. The National Trust is due to spend £27.5m on maintenance of historic properties in 2015-16, double the amount of a decade ago, as well as funding work on estate and garden buildings, historic interiors and other projects. English Heritage was given a one-off grant of £80m to fund a repairs backlog when it was split into the English Heritage Trust and Historic England last year. Despite the enthusiasm for heritage and the need to keep it in good condition, many of the skills needed in the industry are not held in high regard — to the chagrin of the specialists. “Slating in our country is always looked upon as a poor man’s trade,” says Mr Millar, whose business works on some of Scotland’s finest buildings. “But slating in Germany, in particular, is viewed as a real skill. Young people are clamouring to get into it.” STS has launched a recruitment drive but “we don’t get inundated with applications from young guys”, says Mr Pavlou. One recent success — recruiting three rope-access technicians — resulted from lay-offs in the North Sea oil sector. Usually, however, “it is really difficult to find the right ones”. The National Heritage Training Group sees an excellent recruiting opportunity in one of the biggest heritage projects of them all: the forthcoming restoration of the Palace of Westminster. It wants the government to demand that all contractors hold, or are

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Plastics manufacturer fined for death of worker

A plastics manufacturer from Cambridgeshire has been fined and given a suspended sentence after a worker died after she was crushed by printing machinery. Peterborough Crown Court heard how a 23-year-old agency worker from Lithuania was working in a print room for Gordon Leach, who trades as RGE Engineering Company. On 27 April 2012, the worker entered the printing machine to apply thinners to the ink when the machine started. Her head was crushed between the printing pads and the printing table of the machine, fatally injuring her. An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) into the incident found that there was no effective system of guarding to the machine and the incident could have been prevented. Gordon Leach (trading as RGE Engineering Company), of The Avenue, Godmanchester, Cambridgeshire, pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 11(1) of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998 and was given a 15 month sentence, suspended for 24 months, was fined £7,500 and was ordered to pay full costs of £45,000. For further information on machinery safeguards visit: http://www.hse.gov.uk/work-equipment-machinery/ Notes to Editors: The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) is Britain’s national regulator for workplace health and safety. It aims to reduce work-related death, injury and ill health. It does so through research, information and advice, promoting training; new or revised regulations and codes of practice, and working with local authority partners by inspection, investigation and enforcement. www.hse.gov.uk More about the legislation referred to in this case can be found at: www.legislation.gov.uk/  HSE news releases are available at http://press.hse.gov.uk Journalists should approach HSE press office with any queries on regional press releases. Source link

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W H Bowker Unveils Plans to Acquire Potter Logistics

Logistics firm W H Bowker Ltd has revealed plans to acquire the warehousing and transport operations at five sites belonging to Potter Logistics Ltd. The deal, completed for an undisclosed sum, will see Preston- and Hull-based W H Bowker purchase Potter’s operations in Knowsley, Droitwich, Selby, Ripon and York. Moving forward as one of the biggest players in the UK’s chemicals logistics, healthcare and food warehousing and distribution sectors, W H Bowker will now operate a road transport fleet comprising over 200 trucks, 450 trailers and 1,000,000 sq ft of warehousing space. Further, W H Bowker’s staff count has risen to 750. For Potter Group (Holdings) Plc, the company is moving into a new era as a property investment business to focus on developing its land assets. Commenting on the acquisition, W H Bowker Ltd’s director, Bill Bowker, said of the acquisition: “Potter Logistics is a highly successful family-owned business with a reputation for quality and excellence in service across a range of specialist road transport and warehousing sectors, evidenced by the numerous awards it has won in recent years. “Derrick Potter, his management team and staff have built industry-wide respect for their logistics expertise and the company provides an excellent fit with our expansion strategy.” He continued: “Both businesses are committed to a long term working relationship supporting and growing customer operations, while ensuring a smooth transition for all customers to the new commercial arrangement.” Speaking for Potter Logistics, chairman Derrick Potter commented: “As a well-recognised, family logistics business of 51 years standing, a key priority in recent years has been to look to the future of our excellent staff, as well as that of our customers, not simply at the legacy that we have built. “We are confident that the Bowker family shares the same cultural ethos that will continue to deliver the same quality of care and to grow the business for the benefit of all concerned.”

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UK’s largest construction safety group reports 28% increase in Occupational Health Non-compliances

BSG (Building Safety Group) , the UK’s largest construction safety group, has reported a 28% increase in the number of Occupational Health non-compliances recorded through site inspections. BSG (Building Safety Group) , the UK’s largest construction safety group, has reported a 28% increase in the number of Occupational Health non-compliances recorded through site inspections. BSG’s latest figure from its Non-Compliance Reporting Index (NCRI) is for the period 1st April to 30th June. The increase is based on over 10,000 independent inspections conducted for the construction industry over a six month period, during the first half of 2016. Key contributors to the rise in Occupational Health non-compliances were Dust Fume infringements (up 13%), breaches in PPE Equipment usage (up 58%) and COSHH violations (up 43%). There was a significant drop in Manual Handling non-compliances however, which have fallen by 18%. BSG’s announcement coincides with recent HSE blitzes which have focused on these areas, frequently leading to FFI (Fees for Intervention) penalties being imposed. The increase in PPE infringements can largely be attributed to firms failing to ‘face fit’ dust masks correctly, something which can be quickly rectified by following the proper procedure. The majority of COSHH non-compliances were recorded for not having the appropriate MSDS or COSHH risk assessment documentation. Of greater concern is the rise in Dust Fume non-compliances, which can have a marked detrimental impact on health. Regularly breathing construction dust can cause diseases like lung cancer, asthma, Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD) and silicosis.Construction workers have a high risk of developing these diseases because many common construction tasks can create high dust levels. These diseases cause permanent disability and early death. Over 500 construction workers are believed to die from exposure to silica dust every year. “Everyone involved in construction has a responsibility in managing risks to health, and all parties must take ownership of their part of the process. Construction dust is not just a nuisance. It can seriously damage your health and cause life changing lung diseases,”commented BSG’s Managing Director, Paul Kimpton, who added: “Implementing an approved ‘Health Surveillance System’ to monitor workers who are exposed to hazardous dusts isoften a requirement by law, so it is critical that companies regularly review their systems and procedures to ensure they remain compliant with UK legislation and that their work-forces remain protected.”  About BSG The Building Safety Group (BSG) is the UK’s largest construction safety group offering consultancy, training and non-compliance reporting services. We are a ‘not for profit’ organisation which has been in business for over 50 years. For more information please visit www.bsgltd.co.uk  About BSG’s Non-Compliance Reporting Index (NCRI) BSG’s ‘Non-compliance Reporting Index’ (NCRI) is the only known real-time, reporting service which compiles high volume health & safety non-compliance data, collected for and on behalf of the construction industry through site inspections.  Source link

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