No excuse for failing to reduce risk of falls
Auckland company CMP Construction Limited has been fined $30,000 and ordered to pay reparation of $10,000 after an
employee of a sub-contractor fell from a height of five metres.
Mohammad Ouzoun suffered multiple fractures and significant head injuries after the fall in August 2013, and suffers
ongoing medical effects including headaches and amnesia.
Mr Ouzoun was installing the supporting frame for the roof of a new retirement home in Albany when he stepped on a piece
of timber that had yet to be fixed down, causing him to fall five metres onto the concrete floor below. Fall protection
equipment including mobile scaffolds, a scissor lift and thirty ‘fall arrest’ bean bags were available at the site, but
was not being used.
CMP Construction was convicted in the North Short District Court and sentenced yesterday under sections 18 and 50 of the
Health and Safety in Employment Act for failing to take all practicable steps to ensure Mr Ouzoun was not harmed at
work.
WorkSafe New Zealand’s Programme Manager Construction and Manufacturing, Marcus Nalter, says CMP Construction should
have ensured that the fall protection equipment that was provided was used.
“CMP Construction had verbally advised Mr Ouzoun’s employer that the scissor lift and bean bags should be used while
work was being done on the upper area of the roof trusses. But it did not ensure that the sub-contractor’s fall
protection controls were properly documented or that the risk analysis for the task was reviewed, updated and followed.
“Falls from height are one of the most common causes of serious injuries in construction. There is simply no excuse for
construction companies not to ensure there is a proper plan in place to minimise the risk of falls,” says Marcus Nalter.
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