Worker’s legs crushed by table tennis tables
A Manchester table tennis table manufacturer has been fined after an employee’s legs were crushed when four one-ton concrete tables toppled over.
Following the incident which occurred on the 20 February 2015, the employee spent 10 weeks in hospital and has been unable to return to work since.
Trafford Magistrates’ Court heard that the worker was attempting, using an overhead crane, to move a concrete table tennis table towards a stack of four other tables which were balanced on two half-empty resin barrels.
As he lowered the table, the barrels – which were not designed to take any loads – collapsed causing the tables to slide off.
The worker, who was standing next to the stacked tables, was trapped between the tables and the crane stanchion.
Other employees managed to move the tables and free the man who was then taken by air ambulance to Wythenshawe Hospital.
Bendcrete Leisure Ltd was prosecuted by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) after its investigation found the work had not been planned, supervised or carried out safely.
The company, of Aquaduct Mill, Tame St, Stalybridge, was fined £12,000 and ordered to pay £3,495 costs after pleading guilty to breaching Section 2 (1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974.
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Worker’s legs crushed by table tennis tables
A Manchester table tennis table manufacturer has been fined after an employee’s legs were crushed when four one-ton concrete tables
Lauren Applebey
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This never ceases to amaze me, you don’t need root cause analysis to determine this kind of accident.
It is quite shocking that this sort of accident even occurred in the first place.