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A civil engineering contractor has been fined £70,000 after a worker suffered life threatening injuries when he was hit on the head and pinned down by a large segment of concrete.
The 48-year-old employee of Rotherham-based KDS Construction Company suffered multiple injuries, including fractures to his skull, ribs, left arm and vertebrae.
The firm had been contracted by Abbey Forged Products Limited to carry out groundworks for the installation of a new underground water drainage system at the company’s Beeley Wood Works site in Sheffield.
The investigation found that KDS employees had dug out a number of excavations for the new tanks and pipework.
After one tank had been installed, work started on another excavation for a second tank adjacent to the first.
While this was being dug, one of the groundworkers was asked to cover over some pipework which was sticking out of the first tank to protect it from being damaged by backfill.
When he descended into the excavation to do this, a section of unsupported concrete which was overhanging the excavation broke off and fell onto him.
KDS pleaded guilty to breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and was fined £70,000 and ordered to pay costs of £4,016.15.
HSE inspector Alison Outhwaite said: “The employee’s injuries were life changing and he could have easily been killed. This serious incident and devastation could have been avoided if basic safe guards had been put in place.
“This case highlights the need to be aware of the risks of working in and near excavations. The groundwork industry need to appreciate the risks even where excavations are thought to be ‘shallow’ or the ground considered to be stable. As HSE guidance states. ‘Any unsupported excavation will be safe ONLY if its sides are battered back sufficiently or if the excavation is in sound rock (HSG150).
“If a suitable safe system of work had been in place prior to the incident, the life changing injuries sustained by the employee could have been prevented.”