Staples Disposables Ltd, a Lincolnshire  firm which makes disposable paper products has been  ordered to pay more than  £116,000 in fines and costs after three  workers suffered hand injuries using  unguarded machines.
Incident 1 26th July 2011
Bruno Jorge had to have his left thumb  amputated  after getting it crushed in unguarded machinery on a production line.
Mr Jorge was operating a new   production line. He accessed the machine to clear a blockage, which was  normal  practice, but his hand was drawn into the rollers. As well as  crushing his  thumb, he also fractured his palm.  
Manufacturers had overiddent interlocks on the enclosures during commissioning. Staples management knew about this but did nothing to reinstate the interlocks.
Incident 2 25th August 2011
 An agency worker cut her finger on the blade of a napkin folding machine. This was due to an interlock having been removed.
Incident 3 
An employee lost all  four  fingers of his right hand after it was caught between unguarded rollers. It was  normal  practice to lock operators within an enclosure designed to keep them   away from the dangerous parts of a toilet roll manufacturing line.  Supervisors  and management had failed to identify and stop this highly  dangerous practice.
At the court case on 19th April 2013, Staples was fined a total of £116,380 (inc.costs). 
The HSE inspector said:  "Staples Disposables Ltd had a poor  health and safety management system and failed to suitably supervise factory  operations. The company was well aware that machines  should have interlocked  guards in place to prevent people accessing dangerous  moving parts of  the machinery, yet it continued to put workers at risk over a  prolonged  period. Injury was inevitable."
Source: HSE HSE/M/105/13 
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