Global courier firm DHL has been sentenced for safety failings after
an HGV driver was run over by his own vehicle at a depot in
Bedfordshire. The 42-year-old, from Leeds, was connecting a trailer to
his cab at DHL Express (UK) Ltd’s Dunstable depot at the start of his
shift at around 2am on 4 September 2012, when the vehicle moved. He was
run over after he tripped and fell while attempting to catch up with the
cab to stop it hitting and injuring a pedestrian or nearby property.
The
worker suffered life-changing injuries including five fractures to his
pelvis. He was unable to walk for six months, can no longer drive as he
cannot sit for any length of time, and has been diagnosed with
post-traumatic stress disorder, for which he is still receiving
treatment. He has been unable to work since. The incident was
investigated by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), which prosecuted
DHL Express (UK) Ltd at the Old Bailey.
The court heard that the
driver reversed his cab unit up to the trailer to recouple them. The
driver parked on a sloping driveway off Boscombe Road in Dunstable and
left the cab’s engine running. He walked to the rear of the vehicle to
connect the trailer to the cab. But it was when he released the
trailer’s independent brakes that the weight of the trailer pushing on
the cab caused the whole vehicle to move forward. He ran down the length
of the vehicle to the front but tripped and fell before reaching the
driver’s door. The vehicle ran along the length of his right leg and
stopped at his waist.
HSE’s investigation revealed that the
company had failed to assess the risks associated with parking on uneven
or sloping ground and, as a result, had not identified and implemented
practicable controls or safeguards such as the use of wheel chocks and
audible handbrake alarm.
DHL, registered at Great South West Road,
Hounslow, was fined a total of £50,000 and ordered to pay costs of
£15,698 after pleading guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health
and Safety at Work Act 1974.
After the case, HSE Inspector Emma
Page said: “This was a horrific and entirely preventable injury caused
by the failure of the company to recognise all hazards arising from
routine operations at their depot and their duty to protect the people
working there. The risk of large goods vehicles moving when parked on
sloping ground when the brakes of the trailer are disengaged is
foreseeable and referred to in a number of HSE publications. There was
therefore no excuse for such a big employer working routinely with
vehicles to ignore this risk.”
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