Borough council fined £300k over fatal collision involving bus passenger

A council has been fined £300,000 after a passenger was killed when run over by a lorry at a bus station.

Bedford Borough Council had previously pleaded guilty to breaching Section 3(1) of Health and Safety at Work Act over the incident. It was also ordered to pay costs of £16,803.59.

Bus station operator Cambus Limited, which had pleaded not guilty to breaching Section 3(1), was meanwhile found guilty and fined £350,000. It was also ordered to pay costs which are still to be agreed.

St Albans Crown Court had heard how on 13 February 2015, Nicola Berridge stepped off the bus and was run over by a grab lorry as she walked across a pedestrian crossing at the bus station. She suffered fatal injuries.

The grab lorry was delivering sand to a contractor as the bus station had been demolished and was being reconstructed at the time.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive found that the visibility at this crossing was obstructed by buses which had been permitted to park on double-yellow lines between the crossings for several years.

The HSE concluded that the borough council and Cambus had failed to coordinate and cooperate with one another to manage pedestrian and vehicle interaction within the bus station. “They had joint responsibility to assess the risk to members of the public from vehicle movements within the bus station and to put in place reasonably measures to reduce that risk so far as was reasonably practicable.”

Speaking after the hearing HSE inspector Emma Page said: “There were inadequate control measures in place to segregate vehicles and pedestrians at the site and lack of proper planning in terms of pedestrian access and egress to the bus station.

“Hazards associated with vehicles and pedestrians in the same location, particularly the case in a facility such as a bus station in the centre of a busy town, are well known and easily controlled using reasonably practicable precautions.”