A major construction company has been fined for safety failings after a
worker was critically injured when he was run over by a nine tonne
dumper truck. David Windsor, 62, of St George, Bristol, suffered life
changing injuries, including severe brain injury, in the incident at a
building site at Mount Wise, Devonport, on 7 October 2010. He also
sustained facial fractures, serious injuries to right arm, fractured
ribs, a fractured pelvis, leg fractures and foot injuries all on his
right side where the dumper ran over him. The injuries were life
changing. He spent two weeks in intensive care, a month in a high
dependency unit and was finally discharged home from a brain injury
rehabilitation unit in April, 2011 – more than six months later.
Oxfordshire-based
JB Leadbitter was sentenced recently (19 September 2014) after an
investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found the company
failed to adequately manage and control workplace transport. Plymouth
Crown Court heard that Mr Windsor, a delivery driver, was delivering a
mortar silo to the Leadbitter site, a former MoD property where 159 new
homes were being built. He was wearing high-visibility clothing, but was
hit by the dumper as he was crossing the site to return to his lorry.
HSE
established that there was no segregated, defined area provided for
people on foot like Mr Windsor. JB Leadbitter, as the Principal
Contractor for the site, had not produced or put in place a suitable
traffic management plan to ensure the separation of vehicles and
pedestrians using the roadway at the site.
JB Leadbitter and Co Ltd,
of Grange Court, Abingdon Science Park, Abingdon, in Oxfordshire, was
found guilty of breaching Section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work
Act 1974. The company was fined £100,000 and ordered to pay full costs
of around £100,000.
HSE Inspector Jonathan Harris, speaking after
the hearing, said: “This terrible incident has left Mr Windsor with
significant and lasting injuries and could easily have led to his death.
It is unlikely he will be able to return to work again. Simple
forethought and planning could have avoided this happening. JB
Leadbitter failed to identify risks to site workers and visitors, such
as delivery drivers, in their construction phase plan and made no
provision for segregating site vehicles and pedestrians at the top end
of the site. Other workers on this large site were frequently exposed to
serious risks as a result of this lack of planning. Workplace transport
incidents are the second most common cause of serious and fatal
incidents in the construction industry, yet they could easily be avoided
by having proper plans in place and provision for pedestrians on site.”
Stephen Asbury, Managing Director with CRS
commented that on average, seven workers are killed every year as a
result of collisions with vehicles or mobile plant on construction
sites. He said that over 90 were seriously injured.
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