Worker falls through roof, company fined


Friday, 20 September, 2024

Worker falls through roof, company fined

A $40,000 fine and conviction has been handed to a solar installer after one of its workers fell 10 metres through an asbestos roof.

Sams Solar Pty Ltd was sentenced in the Portland Magistrates’ Court on Tuesday, 10 September after pleading guilty to a single charge of failing to provide and maintain a safe workplace. The company was also ordered to pay $6026 in costs.

Sams Solar was contracted to remove asbestos sheeting and then install a new roof and solar system at a Portland self-storage warehouse in April 2023.

The court heard the company engaged subcontractors to carry out the asbestos removal at the three-storey building and provided equipment to complete the work.

Workers were provided with a harness and lifted on to the roof by a boom lift before attaching to an anchor point using ropes, rather than retractable or inertia lanyards, and traversing the roof via unsecured lengths of timber.

One of the workers’ harness ropes became tangled and as he unclipped to fix it, the brittle roof surface below the timber he was walking on cracked and he fell through it.

The worker was airlifted to hospital suffering a fractured wrist and severe bruising to his body.

According to WorkSafe Victoria, it was reasonably practicable for Sams Solar to ensure the asbestos removal work was performed from underneath the roof using a scissor lift. If the work was to be done from the rooftop, the company should have ensured there was safety mesh or a catch platform installed under the asbestos sheeting and that temporary access walkways were at least 450 mm wide and secured to the top of the roof.

WorkSafe Executive Director of Health and Safety Sam Jenkin said a worker had been left with painful injuries in an incident that could have easily ended in tragedy.

“Falls from height remain one of the biggest killers on Victorian worksites and it is frustrating to see employers continue to put workers in situations where they are at serious risk of harm,” Jenkin said.

“As highlighted in this case, safety harnesses come with their own hazards and should only be considered in instances where greater risk control measures cannot be used.”

Image credit: iStock.com/Halfpoint. Stock image used is for illustrative purposes only.

Related News

Transitional period extended on height safety regulations

An extension has been granted on the transitional period for compliance with regulations...

$90K fine after worker injured in fall

A worker suffered serious injuries after falling through a patio roof, leading to a $90,000 fine...

Companies fined after steel plate fall almost injures worker

Two Victorian companies have been fined a total of $45,000 after a 12-kilogram steel plate fell...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd