Firm fined after cherry picker hit by bus in Glasgow throwing worker from machine onto parked car

The cherry picker from the incident.
-Credit: (Image: Reach Publishing Services Limited)


A Scots building firm has been hit with a £215,000 after a worker was thrown off a cherry picker when it was hit by a bus in Glasgow.

North Ayrshire-based McTaggart Construction Limited pleaded guilty to breaching construction regulations and health and safety legislation at Glasgow Sheriff Court on 10 October 2024 after failing to take steps to ensure the safety of workers.

The court heard that on 4 February 2022 at a construction site on Ardencraig Road a then 27-year-old roofer was in the basket of a cherry picker (Mobile Elevated Work Platform or ‘MEWP’) which was raised to allow repairs to cladding. The operator was also in the basket.

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At about midday a double-decker bus struck the “knuckle” of the cherry picker, which was protruding over the roadway with the force of the collision lifting the machine onto its two rear wheels and caused its boom to hit a nearby lamppost.

The roofer, who was not secured within the basket, was thrown from the basket and fell onto the roof of a parked car before falling to the pavement. The court was told he suffered severe injury and permanent impairment because of the incident.

The cherry picker operator managed to remain within the basket and a Health and Safety Executive investigation found that as principal contractor, McTaggart Construction Limited failed to ensure that the work being carried out at height was properly planned and that personal protective equipment was used.

There were also no suitable measures in place to segregate the cherry picker from traffic effectively. Following the incident, the company took remedial and preventative action, overhauling its processes and policies.

Speaking after the sentencing, Debbie Carroll, who leads on health and safety investigations for the COPFS, said: "This was a serious incident that could have been avoided if McTaggart Construction Limited had put in place the appropriate planning and protective measures. Falls from height are usually the greatest single cause of death and serious injury to workers within the construction industry.

“Hopefully, this prosecution will remind other employers that failure to fulfil their obligations can have serious and life-changing consequences and that they will be held to account for their failings."

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