Kilmarnock Sheriff Court heard the case of an Ayrshire waste recycling firm, prosecuted after an agency worker severed his left arm at the shoulder while clearing a conveyor belt blockage, in February 2008. HSE said that the incident was entirely preventable.
Steven Dawson, then aged 28, was working as a line supervisor separating paper and plastic items for Lowmac Alloys Ltd at its premises on the Oldhall West Industrial Estate in Irvine, when the incident happened.
Mr Dawson was alerted to a problem with the conveyor belt and noticed a metal container had caught on the edge of the conveyor belt’s pulley. He opened an unsecured hinged guard to access the blockage, but when he attempted to remove the container his left hand and arm came into contact with the moving belt and the bottom of the pulley – resulting in his arm being severed at the shoulder.
On hearing his screams, one of his colleagues pulled the ‘stop cord’ that was fitted along the conveyor to switch off the machinery.
Mr Dawson was taken to hospital but doctors were unable to reattach his arm. Over the following weeks he underwent two operations and has been told he needs further surgery to repair the nerves in his shoulder
Mr Dawson still suffers from considerable pain and has been unable to return to work.
Lowmac Alloys was prosecuted after a HSE investigation found that more could and should have been done to prevent access to dangerous moving machinery parts.
The HSE investigation concluded that the company:
- failed to provide interlocking guarding to stop dangerous parts moving before a worker entered the danger zones;
- failed to provide effective supervision in order to prevent its employees from entering danger zones while dangerous parts were moving,
- failed to provide a safe system of work to clear blockages, ensuring mains isolators were locked off to prevent electrical power being supplied to the machinery while employees were in close proximity
- failed to make a suitable and sufficient assessment of the risks to the health and safety of employees when exposed to dangerous parts of conveyor belt machinery.
The court was told on 6 October that the company had been served with a ‘Deferred Prohibition Notice’ in 2003 by HSE in relation to the lack of guarding on another conveyor belt at the Irvine premises.
Lowmac Alloys Ltd, of Green Street Lane, Ayr, was fined £118,000 after pleading guilty to breaching sections 2(1) and 2(2)(a) and (c) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974.
Following the case, HSE inspector Mark Carroll, said: “This incident was entirely preventable. Lowmac Alloys Ltd had identified there was a high risk of crushing and trapping in the machinery, however, the company failed to provide interlocking guarding to the gate over the conveyor which would have cut power to the machinery when it was opened.
“Had this been in place, then employees would not have been exposed to the risk from the dangerous parts of the machine.
“As a consequence of this breach, Mr Dawson suffered a horrific, life changing injury.”
Approaches to managing the risks associated Musculoskeletal disorders
In this episode of the Safety & Health Podcast, we hear from Matt Birtles, Principal Ergonomics Consultant at HSE’s Science and Research Centre, about the different approaches to managing the risks associated with Musculoskeletal disorders.
Matt, an ergonomics and human factors expert, shares his thoughts on why MSDs are important, the various prevalent rates across the UK, what you can do within your own organisation and the Risk Management process surrounding MSD’s.
The relentless failings and neglect surrounding the waste and recycling sector appears to have no end. Almost every edition of SHP has a tale of disaster from this pitiful industrywhich seems to have appalling neglect from the Board Room down..