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Contractor fined after worker crushed by falling steelwork

HSE prosecution

HCL Equipment Contracts Ltd sentenced for safety failings after incident at former block works

A PLANT hire and dismantling company has been sentenced for safety failings after a worker suffered life-changing injuries when steelwork he was dismantling collapsed on top of him.

The 39-year-old from Barnsley sustained serious crush injuries including a fractured sternum and vertebrae in the incident at a former concrete block works in Shawell, Lutterworth, Leicestershire, on 11 March 2013.

 

His employer, HCL Equipment Contracts Ltd, was prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) after an investigation identified serious flaws with the dismantling and removal of steelwork which had supported a large aggregate mixer.

Leicester Magistrates’ Court heard the injured man and a colleague used ladders to access the top of the steelwork which was 7m high.

Both men wore harnesses and lanyards, which were the incorrect type, and used propane gas cutting equipment to cut the steelwork into pieces, before dropping them through a gap in the centre of the frame into a designated dropping area.

After clearing various parts of the steelwork, the men began to cut through a standing conveyor, with the intention of weakening it so it would fall on to the platform so they could continue the dismantling.

The HSE investigation found that the injured man was finishing a cut made by a colleague when the conveyor began to fall. He was unable to get out of the way of the falling frame, which weighed 380kg, and it struck him.

The HSE found that no safe escape route was planned, resulting in the incident. The incident could have been prevented with better planning, management and training.

As well as a fractured sternum and two broken vertebrae, the worker suffered eight fractured ribs, broken teeth and required 58 stitches in a head wound.

Derbyshire-based HCL Equipment Contracts Ltd were fined £10,000 and ordered to pay £491 in costs after pleading guilty to breaching Section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974.

Speaking after the hearing, HSE Inspector Tony Mitchell said: ‘HCL Equipment Contracts were responsible for the welfare of their workers and for ensuring the dismantling work was carried out in a safe manner. Our investigation found that if this work had bee properly planned and risk assessed, and sufficient training given, it [the incident] could have been avoided.’

 

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