A HALESOWEN company has been fined £18k after a worker died when he was crushed by granite slabs.
Robert Czachracz was working at Graniteland Limited when he was crushed by two granite slabs.
The 46-year-old, who was from Poland, had been unpacking and moving the slabs onto storage racks, using an overhead crane, at the company’s Lyde Green site in Halesowen.
Two of the slabs, each weighing 250kg, fell and crushed Mr Czachracz against a forklift truck while he was operating the crane’s handheld pendant control, on November 30, 2020.
He died at the scene despite desperate attempts from bystanders at nearby businesses and the emergency services to save him.
A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) investigation found Graniteland Limited and its director, Mr Shu Lai Li, failed to implement staff training or develop safe systems of work for the unloading, loading and handling of concrete slabs.
Graniteland Limited, of Lyde Green, Halesowen, pleaded guilty to breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act.
The company was fined £18,000 and ordered to pay £4,196 in costs and a victim surcharge of £180 at Dudley Magistrates’ Court on March 6.
Mr Shu Lai Li, of Lyde Green, Halesowen, pleaded guilty to breaching the Health and Safety at Work Act.
He was handed a community order for 12 months, with a requirement to complete 120 hours of unpaid work, and ordered to pay £4,043 in costs as well as a victim surcharge of £95 at Dudley Magistrates’ Court on March 6.
HSE inspector Mahesh Mahey said: “This was an entirely preventable accident.
"The risks of lifting and moving granite slabs were obvious, yet could have been controlled by relatively simple and inexpensive measures.
"The company and director failed to adequately control lifting operations which resulted in an employee needlessly and tragically losing his life.”
There was no evidence that employees had received training in the safe operation of machinery, including the overhead crane.
The overhead crane and forklift truck had also not been thoroughly examined, as required by law, and that webbing slings, that could have been used during the unpacking process, were damaged.
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