A glass company has been prosecuted for health and safety offences after putting workers' lives at risk at a site in Bradford.
Workers at the company had been made to work at height without a safe system in place, leaving them at risk of falling up to six metres.
During work at a building in Bradford, in May 2009, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that the company did not properly supervise or manage staff working at height.
Some equipment, including tower scaffolding, was not being used safely, and guardrails were also missing from some parts of the working area. The system of work used by the company to install glass above the ground floor was so unsafe that the work was stopped when HSE served Prohibition Notices on the company.
The company pleaded guilty at Bradford Magistrates' Court today to breaching the Work at Height Regulations 2005. The company was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay costs of £2,538.
A HSE Inspector said:
"In the construction industry falls from height are a serious risk and a major cause of death and life-changing injuries.
"A significant proportion of the falls from height that occur on sites every year result from work where the risks are not being dealt with adequately by proper supervision and control.
"When a business expects work at height to be done using particular work equipment it has a duty to ensure that workers use that equipment safely."

