A man from Stoke-on-Trent has been handed a suspended prison sentence for multiple gas safety offences, including pretending to be Gas Safe registered, several breaches of legal orders banning him from carrying out gas work and falsifying a Landlord's Gas Safety Record.
On 8 October, Cannock Magistrates' Court heard that Christopher Morton was registered as a gas engineer for two periods between 2000 and 2003. However, he was refused re-registration in May 2003 because he failed to demonstrate sufficient competence to the-then registration body, CORGI.
In 2008, the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) served him with a Prohibition Notice, which banned him from carrying out any further gas work. A year later, he failed a refresher training course and was again unable to gain registered status.
Despite this, he continued to carry out gas work, including installing boilers and gas fires and issuing Landlord's Gas Safety Records. On one record he used the name of a genuinely-registered business without its knowledge.
Following information from the local council, Gas Safe and HSE visited three properties in the Stoke-on-Trent area and found faults with the work Mr Morton had carried out.
He pleaded guilty to 14 charges of breaching Section 33(1)(g) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 by breaching Prohibition Notices on different dates and locations between June 2011 and March 2013. He also admitted one breach of Section 33(1)(l) of the same Act for intentionally making a false entry on a document and 13 breaches of Regulation 3(7) of the Gas Safety Installation and Use Regulations 1998 for falsely pretending to be Gas Safe registered.
He was sentenced to 26 weeks in prison, suspended for two years, and ordered to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work. He also has to pay full legal costs of £1,625.