A recycling company in South Devon has been sentenced for serious
safety breaches after a worker was killed after likely being thrown from
a six-tonne dumper truck.
Ben Sewell, 30, from Dartmouth, was
found lying on his back on a bank, a few metres behind the overturned
dumper, on a sloping dirt track at Dittisham Recycling Centre on 21
September 2012. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
The Health
and Safety Executive (HSE) prosecuted the firm after an investigation
discovered that Mr Sewell, who was single, had not been properly trained
by his employer to use the vehicle. The company had also failed to
properly enforce the wearing of seat belts fitted to the dumpers used by
Ben and other staff.
Plymouth Crown Court heard that HSE’s
investigation uncovered a catalogue of dangers at the Dittisham
Recycling site and served a total of eight Prohibition Notices on the
company preventing its use of various plant and machinery until adequate
safety measures were taken.
The court was told that on the day of
the incident Mr Sewell was using the dumper to take loads of oversized
material from one part of the centre to another. The extensive site sits
in a steeply sided valley. At one point he stopped at the top of the
site to deal with a customer before setting off in his empty dumper down
to the bottom of the site along the main dirt track.
The customer
noted the truck was going at speed and that Mr Sewell was not wearing
the seat belt. Minutes later, a colleague at the bottom of the site
noticed smoke rising from a section of the dirt track above where he was
working and he could just see the overturned dumper. He rushed to the
scene and found Ben lying on his back at the side of the track some ten
metres from the dumper truck.
Paramedics later confirmed he had been fatally injured.
HSE
found a series of safety failings with other dumper trucks, a tracked
excavator and with processing machinery for rock crushing and screening.
Tipping operations were also unsafe and some of the roadways about the
site were inadequately protected. Inspectors issued two Improvement
Notices requiring safety changes to the site’s roadways and tipping
safety measures.
Having taken into account the current financial
circumstances of the defendant Company, the Judge – His Justice, Judge
Dingemans ordered Dittisham Recycling Centre Ltd, of Dittisham Cross,
near Dartmouth, South Devon, to pay a fine of £50,000 and also ordered
them to pay £25,000 towards the prosecutions costs (all payable over the
next 5 years) for breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at
Work etc Act 1974. The company had pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing.
After
the case, HSE inspector David Cory said: “Ben’s death was entirely
preventable. The lack of competent training, poor monitoring and
inadequate supervision of staff added up to a fatal combination.
Although there were no witnesses, his injuries were consistent with
being thrown from the truck.
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