News

Unguarded machine costs SIG Trading £600k in fines

By on

A steel firm has been fined £600,000 after a worker lost part of his hand in unguarded machinery.


The incident happened at A Steadman and Son near Welton, Carlisle, the trading name of SIG Trading Ltd, on 21 October 2015. 

Carlisle Crown Court heard how employee Matthew Hook had been using an electrically-powered folding machine to bend metal, when his hand became trapped between the jaws of the machine.  

He had to undergo amputation of parts of four fingers on his left dominant hand owing to the crush injuries he sustained. 

An investigation by HSE found SIG Trading, part of FTSE 250 company SIG plc, had failed to ensure workers only used the folding machine when the guards were in place, to prevent them reaching dangerous parts while it was in operation. 

As reported by the BBC, a safety measure had been deliberately circumvented allowing staff to activate the machine while standing closer than they should. Although the risk of injury had been identified, “the serious and obvious risk” was subsequently removed from the risk assessment, said Craig Hassall for the prosecution. 

SIG Trading Ltd of Adsetts House, Sheffield pleaded guilty to breaching section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was fined £600,000 with costs of £23,593.83. 

Sig Trading was fined £12,000 in 2013 after a customer was crushed against at wall at its Eccles warehouse in September 2012. In August 2011 SIG Trading was fined £36,000 after an employee was run over by a forklift truck at the firm’s Livingstone warehouse in Scotland. 

In February 2010 an employee lost part of three fingers in an incident at its Yorkshire plant and SIG Manufacturing was fined £25,000. 

NEWS


Woman Boardroom Istock Credit Jacoblund

Top jobs in safety in greatest demand right now, says recruiter

By Belinda Liversedge on 29 October 2025

Senior safety professionals who can influence culture, lead transformation, and align health and safety with wider business goals are in growing demand by employers, the recruiter Irwin & Colton have said.



Construction Worker Bad Back MED Istock Coffeekai

HSE inspectors target Manchester construction sites as part of health drive

By Belinda Liversedge on 28 October 2025

HSE inspectors made a series of proactive inspections last week in Manchester city centre to tackle ill-health on construction sites.



HGV Reversing Back View Truck MED Middelveld Edited

Headline fines highlight common errors in reversing

By Belinda Liversedge on 24 October 2025

Reversing incidents have come into sharp focus in recent months, says HSE with two high profile fines totalling £3.5 million for the death of two workers.