Infobite 260: Food Manufacturer Fined after Worker Left Paralysed
A food manufacturer has been fined £400,000 after an employee sustained a pierced left lung, several broken ribs, four fractured vertebrae and a spinal bleed after being drawn in to a large screw conveyor.
The employee was left permanently paralysed and spent six months in hospital following an incident at the company’s Suffolk manufacturing plant. He was put in an induced coma for three weeks and is now classed as a T6 paraplegic and has been diagnosed with autonomic dysreflexia (AD).
He’d been tasked with cleaning a large screw conveyor used to move poultry turkeys along and chill them. While working on the gantry between the spin chillers he noticed a turkey stuck at the bottom of it.
As he attempted to dislodge the turkey using a squeegee, Colin was drawn into the machine. It was only when a colleague noticed that he was missing from the gantry and heard his cries for help, the emergency stop was pulled.
Investigators from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found an unsafe system of work meant the chillers remained running as he went to dislodge the turkey.
There was another incident at the same plant five months earlier, on 12 August 2019, when a turkey deboning line had to be shut down after developing a fault.
As a result, 34-year-old Adriano Gama, along with the rest of the employees, were moved to a surplus production line to continue the process.
Whilst working on the surplus production line, one of the wings became stuck in the belt under the machine. Adriano attempted to push it out of the way, but as he did do, his gloved hand became caught in the exposed sprocket of the conveyer and was drawn into the machine.
He was eventually freed and taken to hospital having suffered a broken arm and severe damage to the muscles in his forearm.
A subsequent investigation by the HSE found that on the day of the incident pre-start checks were only completed on the production lines that were regularly used.
Therefore, when workers were asked to move to the surplus deboning line there was no system in place to ensure that it was checked prior to it being put into operation.
The investigation uncovered that two safety guards had been removed and a team leader responsible for the production lines had verbally reported this issue to the engineering team, but it was not followed up by either party.
The food manufacturer admitted breaching section 2(1) of the Health and Safety at Work Act . As well as the £400,000 fine, the company was ordered to pay costs of £15,000.
‘Both incidents could have been avoided – the consequences were devastating for the paralysed worker in particular,’ said the HSE principal inspector after the hearing.
‘If they had acted to identify and manage the risks involved and put a safe system of work in place they could have easily been prevented.
‘Fundamentally, you should not clean a machine while it is running.
‘Companies need to ensure that risk assessments cover activities including cleaning and blockages, and that where appropriate, robust isolation and lock-off mechanisms are in place for these activities.
‘Prior to use you can put in place some pre-start checks and if faults such as missing guards are identified they need to be formally reported, tracked, rectified and closed out.’
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