Quarry operator to pay reparations

A quarry operator has been fined and told to pay reparations after an employee fell from a machine and suffered multiple injuries including brain bleeding and a fractured skull.

In Invercargill District Court yesterday, Southern Aggregates Ltd was fined $36,000 and ordered to pay $21,118 in reparations and costs.

WorkSafe laid a charge against the company under the Health and Safety in Employment Act, following the incident last November.

Southern Aggregates Ltd was sentenced on one charge of failing to take all practicable steps to ensure the safety of an employee.

The man was working on a stationary Kumbee hammer mill machine at the Greenhills Quarry in Southland.

He fell 1.47m from the machine's work platform, WorkSafe said.

"The section of the platform he was working on did not have adequate guard railing, only a chain barrier which hung low and did not provide adequate fall protection," WorkSafe said.

The man also suffered a bruised hip and concussion.

WorkSafe said Southern Aggregates failed to identify all hazards associated with employees working at height and did not provide adequate guard railing.

"Incidents such as these can be prevented if employers make it a priority to identify all hazards before work starts, as well as ensure that the necessary equipment, appropriate precautions and systems of work are set in place," WorkSafe chief inspector Keith Stewart said.

Southern Aggregates' punishment came the same day a different firm was sentenced and fined for exposing workers to the risk of a fall from height.

Taylor Construction 2011 Ltd was fined $36,750 yesterday in Manukau District Court.

The company was penalised after three WorkSafe personnel visited a building site in Botany, east Auckland.

"They found the director/employee of Taylor Construction 2011 Limited, who was also in charge of the work site at the time, walking along the roof trusses," WorkSafe said. "Inspectors asked him to come down for his own safety but they were ignored."

Inspectors said edge protection and timber platforms used for working at height were inadequate and unsafe.

 

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