The New Zealand Herald

Workplace accident costs firm $70,000

- — Northern Advocate

A Whangarei engineerin­g firm has been ordered to pay more than $70,000 after an employee injured an index finger which had to be partly amputated.

It was the second prosecutio­n against Avon Industries in just over six years for breaches of the Health and Safety in Employment Act 1992. Another worker lost part of his right index finger after an accident in 2009.

WorkSafe laid one charge of failing to take steps to ensure the safety of an employee against the company, which operates a metal manufactur­ing plant at Pipiwai Rd in Kamo, after Robert Panui injured his right index finger on September 30, 2014.

Avon Industries pleaded not guilty but was found liable after a hearing in the Whangarei District Court last October. The company appeared for sentencing on Friday.

Panui was operating a 90-tonne press to produce 300 insulator Z-brackets by cutting up 6m lengths of flat steel. Steel is inserted through the front of the press until it hits a back-stopper before the press is operated and the appropriat­e length is cut.

Panui had to reach in to the machine until he felt the back-stop and then hold up the metal bar. He was injured after he instructed the person at the front of the machine to operate the press.

WorkSafe lawyer Steve Symon sought reparation of between $8000 and $10,000.

Paul White, who represente­d Avon Industries, said his client made an effort to go to restorativ­e justice which was declined by Panui.

Judge Duncan Harvey said the company acted impeccably by cooperatin­g with WorkSafe and supporting Panui, including allowing extra recovery time.

He said the injury happened because there was no rear guard on the machine and due to a lack of training. Both failings have now been rectified, he said.

Judge Harvey said it was a concern that another employee and safety adviser who observed unsafe practices neither prevented them nor reported them to anyone.

Avon Industries’ level of culpabilit­y, he said, was moderate but its actions were a departure from best practice and extremely risky.

He said it was not a large company, where Panui is back working.

Judge Harvey ordered Avon Industries to pay a $61,600 fine, $8000 in reparation, $1186 in prosecutio­n costs and $130 in court costs.

In July 2009, another employee on a month’s trial trapped his right index finger in a machine.

His finger required amputation at the first joint and the company was fined $42,500.

 ?? Picture / John Stone ?? Two Avon Industries workers have been injured since 2009.
Picture / John Stone Two Avon Industries workers have been injured since 2009.

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