Otago Daily Times

Faulty truck brake likely killed road worker, court told

- PHIL PENNINGTON

WELLINGTON: A truck driver closing his cab door was probably all it took to dislodge a dodgy handbrake, sending the vehicle down Ngauranga Gorge in Wellington and fatally striking a road worker.

This is the expert view in the summary of facts at the Wellington District Court where roading company Fulton Hogan appeared for sentencing this week over the death of 25yearold, fatheroftw­o Joji Bilo in March 2019.

‘‘During the examinatio­n . . . the brake lever could be released with a light touch of the plastic knob,’’ the summary read.

‘‘The most likely scenario was that the vibrations caused by closing the truck’s door caused the lever to release.’’

During the inspection ‘‘the park brake failed every time it was tested — by applying the handbrake and closing the door’’.

It could have been worse. The runaway truck veered into a lane occupied by other motorists just after 9pm, and a photo shows it going downhill behind a car, on one of the country’s steepest sections of State Highway 1, scraping along the median barrier, before coming to a halt after 750m.

Fulton Hogan ‘‘exposed members of the public who were driving along SH1, adjacent to the worksite, to similar risks of death or serious injury’’, the summary said.

Similar health and safety charges against other companies and individual­s, who effectivel­y subcontrac­ted to Fulton, were dropped.

The judge decision.

Joji Bilo’s family told the court of their loss and pain.

‘‘You can’t have a broken heart and harbour anger,’’ said Luisa Bilo, who now raises their 7 and 5yearold children, with help from her mother Una, in a home Fulton Hogan’s compensato­ry payments helped her buy.

She said her husband was ‘‘smart, fast, safe’’.

‘‘He would never leave myself and the kids.’’

That night, Mr Bilo had a measuring wheel, and was pacing out for a resealing job in reserved his the gorge, below the crest, and below several parked trucks.

The handbrake that gave way, called a Sanwa Seiki, had been the subject of numerous safety alerts since one failed in 2010, killing a man in Dunedin, but no recalls were ordered by Waka Kotahi NZ Transport Agency until last year.

As his truck began to roll away, driver David Jenkins tried to get back in but fell and was seriously hurt.

‘‘Mr Bilo did not see the driverless truck coming from behind him and was struck by it.’’

A colleague a bit further down the hill, leapt out of the way, then seeing the truck was heading towards other workers, ran, yelling at them.

‘‘The truck missed them, entered the lane of SH1 that was open to traffic, collided with the median barrier and continued downhill.’’

A later check on the handbrake showed a valve on it was closed, applying the brake, but it was not in a locking position.

This was a known risk with this type of brake.

Fulton Hogan had removed all Sanwa Seiki handbrakes from its vehicles in 2012.

It did not ensure its subcontrac­tors had done the same.

‘‘We effectivel­y failed Joji and we allowed that risk to come on to our site,’’ Fulton Hogan managing director Cos Bruyn told the court.

‘‘I’m truly sorry,’’ he said, addressing Luisa Bilo, Joji’s mother and brothers, and family members seated in court.

Its subcontrac­tor, Wellington Contractin­g, had not got Fulton Hogan’s approval for Shuttle Express to have its driver, Mr Jenkins, on site, the court was told.

Shuttle Express ‘‘had not serviced or maintained the park brake lever as specified’’ by the truck importer or NZTA safety bulletin, the summary said.

Fulton Hogan had its own risk protection measures on site, but not all subcontrac­tors had received all the documents to do with these.

After the fatality, Fulton Hogan began lobbying, ‘‘calling for the industry to follow what [it] had carried out to its own fleet’’, its lawyer Paul Chisnall said.— RNZ

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