A Grimsby construction company has been fined for safety breaches and
ordered to pay compensation, after a worker suffered serious leg
injuries while installing piles for a new school science block.
Groundworker Jamie North, 49, from Grimsby, sustained multiple leg
fractures during the pile cropping work at Caistor Grammar School,
Lincolnshire, on 5 March 2013.
Mr North required two operations and
had a steel frame and screws fixed on his leg. He also developed a blood
clot which required further treatment after a 21-day stay in hospital.
He was off work for a year and is still undergoing treatment on his
ankle. He can no longer work in the construction industry.
An
investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) identified that
Topcon Construction Ltd failed to ensure that work equipment used for
cropping piles was used only in suitable conditions, and failed to
dismantle a reinforced concrete pile in a manner to prevent danger.
Lincoln
Magistrates’ Court heard recently (10 November 2014) that Mr North was
working on the construction of the new school building which required
the installation of pre-cast concrete driven foundation piles. The
six-metre long piles were driven into the ground using a piling rig, in
an upright position, until they were set. The excess part of the piles,
which extends out of the ground, was then to be cropped using a
hydraulic pile cropper.
HSE found the pile cropper hired by Topcon
was only suitable for piles with a single, steel reinforcing bar running
through the length of a pile. Another cropping machine, a power
cropper, had been recommended for the school construction job by the
hire company but the advice had been disregarded. Magistrates were told
the pile cropper being used was not powerful enough to cut through the
concrete and four steel bars so was used to nibble the concrete away to
expose the steel bars, which were then cut through with a disc cutter.
The piles were then pushed to the ground in an uncontrolled manner. As
Mr North was guiding the cropper over one pile, a colleague pushed
another pile over but he had not cut through one of the bars. The pile
twisted and fell onto Mr North.
Topcon Construction Ltd of Louth
Road, Grimsby, was fined £10,000 and ordered to pay £1,980 in costs
after pleading guilty to breaching regulation 4(3) of the Provision and
Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998, and regulation 29(1) of the
Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007. Topcon
Construction Ltd must also pay Mr North compensation of £10,000 for his
injuries.
Speaking after the hearing, HSE inspector Martin Waring
said: “Topcon Construction Ltd failed to heed two warnings that the pile
cropper they had ordered was not suitable for the job, hence the need
to adopt the high-risk ‘tree-felling’ method of pushing the piles over.
They should have foreseen that the felling of piles, in an area that
workers could wander into, presented a high risk of injury. Mr North
suffered very serious leg injuries in an incident that could have been
prevented, had the work been better planned and managed.”
CRS says “In the construction industry in 2013-14, there were 42 fatal injuries to workers; 14 of these to the self-employed”.
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