Big fine over freight harm
A national transport and logistics company has been fined $300,000 over an incident that caused severe injuries to a worker.
Following a Comcare investigation, K&S Freighters Pty Ltd pleaded guilty to a single charge of failing in its duties under the Commonwealth Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (WHS Act). The matter was prosecuted by the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions.
The incident happened on 25 November 2018 at a freight depot in Adelaide’s northern suburbs.
After delivering a load of steel coil, workers were manually raising the heavy interlocked gates on a truck trailer when the gates fell on a K. & S. worker, causing severe leg fractures.
K&S Freighters pleaded guilty to breaching section 19 of the WHS Act by failing in its primary duty of care to provide a safe system of work. The charge is a Category 2 offence under the Act, carrying a maximum penalty of $1.5 million.
In sentencing in the District Court of South Australia today, Judge Ian Press said there were considerable and foreseeable risks to the drivers and workers in failing to ensure the use of exclusion zones and mechanical lifting of the gates. Judge Press also took into account the impact on the victim.
Comcare’s General Manager of Regulatory Operations Justin Napier said the risks involved in the case were obvious.
“The consequences of failing to have a safe system of work in place for this job were potentially fatal,” Mr Napier said.
“The incident was preventable and there were simple remedies available to minimise the risks – using mechanical means to move the gates and establishing an exclusion zone during the operation.”