Winston Solicitors warn about the danger of asbestos in UK schools
Released
on: July 11, 2008, 6:00 am
Press
Release Author: Stephen Laycock - Winston
Solicitors
Industry:
Law
Press
Release Summary: Uk Lawyers warn local authorities to take care
regarding the presence of asbestos in schools and colleges within
the UK
Press
Release Body: Winston Solicitors discuss the
increasing concern because of the potential health risks caused
by asbestos that is still present in many UK schools.
It
is now becoming an all too familiar sight in local newspapers
that a local teacher or school caretaker has died from an
"asbestos cancer". The term "asbestos cancer"
is one commonly adopted by the press when referring to the terminal
disease mesothelioma.
In excess of 95% of cases of mesothelioma the cause of the disease
is exposure to asbestos dust or fibres. Mesothelioma is a form
of cancer which occurs in the lining of the lung and less commonly
the peritoneum. It can develop between 15 to 50 years after the
initial asbestos
exposure, however once it develops it is a very aggressive
type of cancer.
The
scientific view is that there is no safe level of exposure to
asbestos, that is, there is no recognised threshold of exposure
to asbestos below which exposure could be said to be safe. This
fact has recently been underpinned by the Health &
Safety Executive (HSE). Governments have known of the
health risks of asbestos since the 1930s, and the first safety
law specifically focusing on asbestos was made in 1931.
Between
1945 and 1975 when the use of asbestos in building materials was
at its greatest 13,000 schools were built and also many other
schools were refurbished and extended. Many of the new school
buildings were made from prefabricated panels to reduce the financial
cost and increase the speed of the school building works. The
full extent of asbestos use in school buildings is not known or
it has not been made public. The HSE commented that the schools
built between 1945-1975 contain large amounts of asbestos in their
structure.
Asbestos
was used extensively in the construction of schools, for example,
as a general building board, and as insulation on steel structures
in prefabricated buildings, and also in ceilings and walls. Throughout
most of the 20th century asbestos was used to insulate boilers,
hot water pipework and electrical installations. As the Department
of the Environment has commented asbestos insulation deteriorates
with age, it disintegrates and asbestos fibres fray and fall.
Decades
of under-funding has resulted in schools being inadequately maintained.
The Department for Education and Science (DfES)
and the HSE have not organised an audit of the
full extent and condition of asbestos in schools, and it has been
left to be considered on a local basis. The schools themselves
have limited budgets, and there is a concern that governors and
headteachers have not been properly informed or instructed on
the asbestos hazard. Schools have been left to manage the asbestos
in the fabric of their buildings, however there has been a lack
of effective guidance from the DfES.
It
is believed that during the period 2002-2004, 31 primary and secondary
teachers died of mesothelioma. This figure more than doubles if
teachers’ assistants, higher education and childcare are
included. When looking back over previous periods the number of
victims of mesothelioma appears to be continually rising.
Stephen
Laycock, of Winston Solicitors Leeds a specialist in
industrial disease claims, expressed his concern at the apparent
lack of planning and funding. “In view of the uncertainty
regarding whether there is a safe level of exposure to asbestos,
questions should surely be put to the government as to why it
has no plans to improve the education and guidance supplied to
Local Authorities on safely managing the asbestos in schools”.
There
is also the important issue concerning the provision of funding
to safely remove asbestos. In the past, governments have spent
millions of pounds removing asbestos from Westminster Palace and
government buildings in London. However the funds have not even
been made available for a centralised system of auditing asbestos
in schools.
Web
Site:
http://www.theclaimsconnection.co.uk/asbestos-compensation/no-win-no-fee-solicitors.html
Contact
Details: Martin Nolan
Press Officer
Winston
Solicitors Leeds
E: mjn@winstonsolicitors.co.uk
T: +44 113 268 8898