A Leicestershire aluminium fabricator was sentenced today (3 June)
after a worker was crushed under a lifting truck which tipped over while
lifting extruder dies from storage racks.
Stefan Durina, 33, of
Beeston, Nottinghamshire, died following the incident at Boal UK Ltd in
Shepshed, near Loughborough, on 23 June 2013.
Leicester Crown
Court heard that Mr Durina was trapped underneath an overturned hi bay
order picker truck he was using to collect or return aluminium extruder
dies, types of metal mould, to the racked storage system.
Mr Durina suffered fatal chest and abdominal crush injuries and died from his injuries in hospital the next day.
An
investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) concluded that
the incident was entirely preventable and stemmed from three material
breaches of health and safety law. These were inadequate risk assessment
for collecting and replacing dies in storage racks, an inadequate safe
system of work for the use of a Narrow Aisle High Level Reach Truck and
the company’s organisation of lifting operations in the die storage
area.
Boal UK Ltd of Ashby Road East, Shepshed, Loughborough, was
fined £140,000 and ordered to pay £32,251.31 in costs after pleading
guilty to breaching sections 2(1) and 3(1) of the Health and Safety at
Work etc. Act 1974.
In his sentencing remarks, the Judge stated
that Boal UK Ltd fell far short of the applicable standards and in
particular, there was a prolonged and very substantial failure on the
part of the company in relation to its monitoring, supervision and
enforcement of safe working procedures in the die shop.
After the hearing, HSE inspector Berian Price said:
“Mr Durina’s death was entirely preventable and his life was needlessly lost.
“This
incident happened because of management’s failure to ensure a safe
system of work was in place that was clearly understood and adhered to
by employees and supervised by departmental management. This stemmed in
part from the lack of appropriate controls to prevent the lifting truck
coming into contact with overhead beams, and from poor control of
working practices.
“In addition, there was a failure on behalf of management to record and learn from previous near-miss incidents.
“Lifting
operations, which often present severe risks to workers, must be
properly planned, controlled and adequately supervised. Serious and
fatal incidents have occurred due to workers being crushed by lifting
equipment
“It is therefore important to properly enforce, plan and
organise lifting operations so they are carried out in safe manner.
Each of these elements requires a person or people with sufficient
competence to be notified at each step.
“For complex and high-risk
operations, the planning and organisation should be extensive and
meticulous. Duty holders should also consider ‘foreseeable misuse’, such
as overloading.”
NEBOSH National General Certificate
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