Worker falls when standing on pallet on forklft truck
LE Jones Ltd, a haulage company of Ruthin, was fined £19,041 (inc. costs) after an employee fell 2m from a pallet on the forks of a forklift truck on 22 February 2011.
The circumstances were:
- The employee was
asked to repair a high level tear in the curtain sided lorry trailer unit
- The work had not been properly
planned and no suitable equipment had been provided by the company.
- The
firm also failed to monitor and supervise the work of its employees.
- To reach the tear, he got on top of a wooden pallet which was raised off the ground by a forklift.
- After completing the work, he called for another worker to lower him
down.
- The lift truck lurched backwards, causing him to fall off the
pallet.
- He
suffered serious fractures to both his heels
The HSE Inspector said:
"This entirely preventable incident could have caused much more serious or even life-changing injuries. The company could have provided a permanent gantry or a cherry-picker for routine repairs on its quite large road fleet. Work at height must be properly planned and organised by a competent person. This prosecution should send a strong signal to all companies that
improvised work platforms are not acceptable in the modern workplace and
HSE will take action where ineffectual monitoring and supervision leads
to any incident."
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