Company Fined After Worker Seriously Injured In 5-metre Fall
Media release
3 May
2013
Company Fined After Worker Seriously
Injured In 5-metre Fall
Serious injuries
sustained by a Christchurch labourer have resulted in a fine
for his employer after he fell five metres from an unstable
work platform.
Berger Heating Limited was fined
$52,000 but this was reduced by the Judge to $15,000 given
the company’s financial situation. The company was also
ordered to pay reparations of $15,000 in the Christchurch
District Court following the incident on 20 June
2012.
The court heard that two employees of Berger
Heating Limited were working on a property at Maffeys Road
which required repairs to the flue, as part of the clean
heat programme.
“Berger Heating was sent
guidelines for working at height and on ladders by the
project management office, however they disregarded them,”
says the Ministry’s Canterbury Rebuild Health and Safety
Programme Director Kathryn Heiler.
“There was
already scaffolding in place around the property, so the
company chose to use a stepladder on the top platform of
scaffolding to reach the roof. This was completely unsafe
and would cause a ‘see-saw’ effect when weight was
placed on the top of the ladder.”
As the
employee was getting down from the roof, the stepladder
‘kicked out’ and he fell approximately five metres. He
sustained head injuries and six fractured bones – a broken
eye socket, nose, leg, knee cap, ankle and wrist.
“Safety must be a priority in the Canterbury
rebuild if we are to avoid incidents like these, which
nearly cost a worker his life,” Ms Heiler
says.
“Falls from height happen far too often on
construction sites and that’s why the Ministry has a
Preventing Falls from Height campaign in place. Between July
2012 and January 2013 health and safety inspectors visited
150 construction sites in Canterbury and took 70 enforcement
actions.
“There are clear guidelines on best
practice for working at height in New Zealand – it is
crucial employers and read and understand these, and put
steps in place to prevent serious
accidents.”
ENDS