A Tameside factory worker had to have part of his left leg amputated
after he was struck by an 850kg metal frame being delivered to a plant
in Glossop, a court has heard. Two firms have been ordered to pay nearly
£50,000 in fines and costs following an investigation into the incident
on 5 January 2012 by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).
Derby
Crown Court heard Vincent Sutton, 49, from Mossley, had been delivering
the five-metre long rectangular frame to Delpro Ltd on the Brookfield
Industrial Estate after it had been manufactured by his employer,
Russell Fabrications (UK) Ltd.
The
frame, known as a skid, had been loaded onto a pickup truck at an angle
using an overhead crane and chains, with the top end resting on a
supporting bar above the driver’s cab. When the frame arrived at the
Delpro plant, workers lifted it off the truck using the same chains,
this time attached to a forklift truck. The chains consisted of two
separate sets, one of which was significantly shorter than the other to
allow for the angle of the lift. As they lifted the frame, the shorter
chains – attached to the higher side – forced their way out from the
hook on the forklift truck. The frame fell around two metres to the
ground and landed on Mr Sutton’s left foot. The damage was so severe
that his leg eventually had to be amputated to above the knee for
medical reasons.
The court was told neither of the companies had
planned how they were going to safely lift the metal frame onto and off
the pickup truck, and that both the truck and the lifting equipment were
entirely unsuitable for the job. Russell Fabrications (UK) Ltd also
failed to make adequate arrangements for the metal frame to be
transported safely.
Delpro Ltd, which designs and assembles
equipment for packaging and printing industries, pleaded guilty to a
single breach of the Lifting Operations and Lifting Equipment
Regulations 1998 by failing to ensure the work was properly planned,
appropriately supervised and carried out in safely.
The company,
of Peakdale Road in Glossop, was fined £12,000 and ordered to pay £8,735
towards the cost of the prosecution on 27 February 2015.
Russell
Fabrications (UK) Ltd, of Wood Street, Ashton-under-Lyne, was fined
£11,917 with costs of £13,734 after being found guilty of a breach of
the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974 following a trial.
Speaking
after the hearing, HSE Inspector Scott Wynne said: “The failings of
both companies contributed to this incident, which could so easily have
been avoided had more thought gone into the planning of the loading,
unloading and transport of the metal frame. The methods adopted for both
the loading at Russell Fabrications (UK) Ltd and the unloading at
Delpro Ltd were inherently unsafe and the vehicle used to transport the
frame was unsuitable as the loading area was too small to safely
accommodate it. Unfortunately the failings of the two companies have led
to a worker suffering life changing and permanently disabling
injuries.”
CRS says that basic health and safety training, such as the NEBOSH National General Certificate in Occupational Health and Safety,
is preventive of incidents such as this one. An informed workforce and
informed managers do not allow unplanned lifts such as this one. We
run courses on a regular basis in the Manchester area, and we encourage firms to attend.
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