A Stonehaven animal feed company has been fined £240,000 after a
lorry driver was crushed to death when a two-tonnes, fully-loaded grain
bin fell onto him from a forklift truck. David Leslie, 49, of Balmedie,
worked for a feed services firm and was picking up a load from East
Coast Viners Grain LLP’s site in Drumlithie, Stonehaven, when the
incident happened on 18 March 2013.
Aberdeen Sheriff Court heard
recently (15 August 2014) that Mr Leslie was helping with the loading
operation. He was standing near the base of the grain elevator, which
carries the animal feed up and drops it into a bulk transporter, and was
ready to pull the lever in the grain bin to release the feed once it
was in position. The forklift driver picked up the grain bin, which
weighed around 600kg and held 1.5 tonnes of feed, and raised the forks
to about five and a half feet to allow better visibility as he moved
forwards. However, the bin started to move on the forks and he shouted a
warning, but Mr Leslie was in front of the forklift when the bin fell
off the forks and struck him. Mr Leslie died after suffering crush
injuries to his head, neck and chest.
An investigation by the
Health and Safety Executive (HSE) revealed East Coast Viners Grain LLP
did not have in place a safe system of work for the task and operators
were left to carry it out in any way they saw fit. The company had
assumed the forklift training they had received from an external
provider would cover safe working. Although the company’s site rules
required visiting drivers to keep away from the loading operation until
advised by the forklift driver, this was not communicated to employees
or drivers. As a result employees regularly allowed visiting drivers to
help loading by pulling the grain bin lever to release the feed.
Supervisors were on site and aware that this was happening. HSE also
found that despite previous incidents of grain bins slipping from the
forks of the trucks, no mechanism or device to secure them had been
installed. There was also poor visibility in the loading area where the
forklifts were operating; failures in work systems and in training for
employees.
Since the incident the company has stopped using metal
grain bins and now only uses cloth bags. It has updated its risk
assessments and work procedures and now prevents visiting drivers from
assisting in lifting operations. Visiting drivers are also asked to sign
that they have read the site rules.
The court heard the company
had been fined £4,000 in April 2011 for a breach of Section 2(1) of the
Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 following an incident in which a
mill operative suffered head injuries when he fell from an excavator
bucket in December 2009.
East Coast Viners Grain LLP, of
Broadwood, Drumlithie, Stonehaven, Aberdeenshire, was fined £240,000
after pleading guilty to breaching Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety
at Work etc Act 1974.
Following the case, HSE Principal Inspector
Niall Miller, said: “East Coast Viners Grain LLP’s failure to act to
make sure its employees and visiting drivers were adequately protected
during loading operations, has led to the tragic death of Mr Leslie,
which could have been so easily prevented. The issues with unsecured
loads on forklift trucks and the dangers of inadequate segregation of
vehicles and people are well-known in all relevant industries. Around a
quarter of all workplace transport incidents involve forklift trucks,
with 50 per cent of these happening because someone is hit either by the
vehicle or a falling load. It was entirely foreseeable that there was a
risk of death or serious injury if the grain bin fell from the forklift
truck, particularly as the company was aware of previous incidents of
loads falling.”
Our advice is simple. Today is the day to decide
to make sure that health and safety on your site(s) is legal and safe.
To fail to do this is to see the future now in events such as those
related to East Coast Viners Grain and Mr Leslie. Contact Ian Cliffen to
arrange a healthcheck-type review at your organisation on 01283 509175
or advice@crsrisk.com
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