VIC: $350K FINE AFTER DRIVER’S FATAL FALL

A Gippsland grain transport company has been convicted and fined $350,000 after a truck driver was killed when he fell almost four metres from the top of a trailer.

D&A Martin Transport Pty Ltd was sentenced in the Melbourne County Court on Tuesday after pleading guilty to a charge of failing to provide and maintain plant that was safe and OHSwithout risks to health.

In January 2022, the 60-year-old truck driver was collecting a load of grain at a Maffra depot. The task required him to climb on top of the trailer to check the hatches. Both sides of the trailer were fitted with guard rails which were raised by flicking a switch.

The front section of the right-side guard rail failed to raise, however, so when the driver reached out for it while leaning forward, he overbalanced and fell about 3.9 metres from the top of the trailer to the concrete ground below.

He was found unresponsive by another worker and died in hospital the following day.

WorkSafe’s investigation found the guard rail failed due to a lack of inspection and maintenance and that previous repairs were poorly done.

The court found it was reasonably practicable for the company to have implemented a qualified inspection and maintenance regime for the guardrails, and to have ensured any faults were competently repaired or the guardrails replaced in accordance with Australian Standards if repairs were not enough to make them safe.

WorkSafe Executive Director of Health and Safety Sam Jenkin said the case sadly highlighted the potential consequences when employers neglected proper maintenance.

"It is not enough for employers to have a fall prevention device in place, they must also make sure they are in good working order to do the job they have been designed to do," Mr Jenkin said. Source: WorkSafe Victoria media release Transport company fined $350,000 after driver's fatal fall

Share Tweet

RELATED

REMINDER: HEALTH AND SAFETY MONTH OCTOBER 2024
WorkSafe Victoria says that Health and Safety Month is “packed with face-to-face and online opportunities to connect, learn and share”.  In addition to events in Melbourne, the regulator has scheduled a tour...
Read More
AIR POLLUTION EXPOSURE IN INFANCY MAY LIMIT ECONOMIC MOBILITY
Higher exposure to fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) during infancy has been associated with lower economic earnings in adulthood in a new study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard...
Read More
HIGHER RISK OF INJURIES AMONG WORKERS IN PRECARIOUS JOBS
In what comes as no surprise to unionists and HSRs, two recent Canadian studies have found that workers in jobs where precarious employment conditions are more common are more likely to experience...
Read More