Taupo & Turangi Herald

Missing railing led to Olympian's fatal fall

- Laurilee McMichael

Failure to complete a home renovation to the required standard led to the death of a former Olympian at his Taupo¯ home nearly three years ago. Simon Charles Dickie was coxswain in the New Zealand coxed four rowing team that won a gold medal in the 1968 Tokyo Olympics and again in the New Zealand rowing eight which won gold in Munich in 1972 and bronze in Montreal in 1976. He went on to become a successful self-employed businessma­n based in Taupo¯.

Dickie, 66, died from a fatal head injury after falling from the bedroom balcony of his Taupo¯ home in 2017. The balcony had no safety railing.

The Coroner’s finding was made in November 2019 but has only just been released under the Official Informatio­n Act.

It says that Dickie kept in touch with the rest of the Olympic rowing team and their partners and they would reunite annually.

On December 12, 2017, the rowers were all staying in Taupo¯ and had spent the day socialisin­g and fishing before reconvenin­g at Dickie and partner Adrienne Walker’s house around 6pm for dinner.

The report by Coroner Michael Robb says Dickie was described as a wonderful host and a sociable and engaging man, and the group had an enjoyable evening. Alcohol was consumed but nobody was considered to be significan­tly intoxicate­d. The group left at about 10.30pm.

Dickie and Walker went to bed at about 11pm, with Dickie saying he planned to get up early the next day. When Walker awoke, he was not in bed. When she went to look for him, she found him lying on the driveway,

which was just under three metres below their bedroom balcony. Emergency services were called, but Dickie had already died.

The Coroner’s report says that the balcony, which was on the second floor, had a small step down from the doorway of the bedroom. It was 2.97m above the ground, 3.5m wide and extended 95cm from the house wall. There were no railings or other barriers around it.

Police noticed that there was a crumpled mat on the floor of the bedroom immediatel­y before the balcony.

“It appears that Simon had either stepped on to the balcony and lost his balance or tripped on the mat while in the bedroom and fallen over the balcony,” the report says.

Investigat­ions by the Coroner

showed that Dickie had a blood alcohol level of 140mg/100mL. The legal limit for driving is 50mg per 100mL.

A report provided by the Taupo¯ District Council showed that a number of alteration­s and extensions to Dickie’s Taupo¯ property had been applied for in 2003, including the balcony that he fell from. Due to the balcony’s height, a balustrade or other form of safety barrier would have been required to be in place to meet building code compliance.

However, at the time of Dickie’s death, no code compliance was ever issued for the extension work. The council performed two inspection­s and wrote to Dickie twice reminding him of his obligation­s to apply for and obtain a code compliance. There was no recorded response to the letters

and no applicatio­n for an extension of time was made.

With no applicatio­n for code compliance for the work, on July 26, 2007, the code compliance was refused by the council under the Building Act.

The Coroner found that Dickie died from a severe head injury when he fell from the second storey balcony on to a paved area and stated it was “an avoidable accident”.

“The balcony was small, being only 95cm wide. I consider that, without a safety-barrier, the balcony was not only non-compliant with the building code, it also presented a significan­t hazard,” the Coroner wrote.

“At some point and for some unknown reason, Simon got up during the night and stepped on to or towards the balcony. Toxicology results confirmed that Simon had been drinking alcohol and was

suffering from a moderate level of intoxicati­on. He likely tripped or otherwise lost his balance and fell from the balcony, suffering the fatal head injury in the fall.”

The Coroner said it was not necessary to make any comments or recommenda­tions because those were already covered under the Building Act and the council’s consenting process. “The requiremen­t for a safety-barrier on a second-storey balcony and the obvious dangers of there being no safety-barrier require no further comment or recommenda­tion.”

Taupo¯ District Council records show that following Dickie’s death, the safety railings for the balconies were manufactur­ed and fitted to the house, and its alteration­s and extensions were issued a Code Compliance Certificat­e in October 2019.

 ?? Photo / File ?? Simon Dickie (left) pictured fly fishing in 2014.
Photo / File Simon Dickie (left) pictured fly fishing in 2014.

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