A construction firm has been fined £23,000 after an employee suffered serious internal injuries when he was crushed by a site dumper.
The accident happened while S&K Groundwork Solutions was working on an excavation at Ghyllgrove Junior & Infants School in Basildon, Essex.
Southend Magistrates’ Court heard how a site dumper was parked at a slight incline on a heap of excavated soil, adjacent to a partially backfilled trench.
The dumper had been left unattended with the engine running when its handbrake failed and it rolled forward into the trench and pinned a worker against a pile of stacked concrete blocks.
The worker suffered six broken ribs, a collapsed lung, multiple arm fractures and a broken nose.
An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) into the incident, which occurred on 24 February 2017, found the company had failed to regularly inspect and maintain the handbrake of the dumper, to ensure it remained effective.
The soil heap had been placed too far back from the excavation, preventing it from acting as a safety barrier and there were no wheel stop blocks or chocks available for use by workers.
The investigation also found the company failed to ensure this work was appropriately supervised and effectively monitored by management.
S & K Groundwork Solutions, of Maypole Road, Maldon, pleaded guilty a breache of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998, a breach of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015.
It was fined £23,000 and ordered to pay costs of £5,220.65.
HSE inspector Glyn Davies said: “This case highlights the importance of regularly inspecting and maintaining construction vehicles, including site dumpers, to ensure they do not deteriorate to the extent that they put people’s safety at risk.
“In this case, the employee’s life-threatening injuries could have been avoided if the company’s management had regularly and effectively monitored and audited their safety management systems. Use of suitable stop blocks near the edge of the trench excavation, or use of wheel chocks, is one such method that may have prevented this incident, which could easily have been fatal.”
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