The Northern Advocate

Warning to trucking companies after girl dies in crash

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Worksafe has issued a warning to companies to check towing equipment on their vehicles following the death of a 9-year-old girl in a traffic crash.

Northland business Johnston’s Direct Logistics Limited was ordered to pay nearly $200,000 in fines and compensati­on when it was sentenced last Friday in Whangārei District Court for causing the death of Storie Bailey Turner-Day on October 30, 2020.

Storie was a passenger in a vehicle struck by a trailer that came loose from a truck leased by the family-run company.

Other occupants of the car she was in and another driver who had to swerve to avoid the trailer, suffered moderate injuries.

A police inspection of the truck after the accident found it was not roadworthy and the trailer’s certificat­e of fitness had expired about nine weeks earlier.

A subsequent WorkSafe investigat­ion found the condition of the tow ball and tow coupling was a “significan­t concern”. There was “very extensive wearing” on both, which meant a small bump in the road, or change of incline, could allow the trailer to easily decouple.

The trailer also had uneven tyre pressure.

When the crash happened the truck driver Johnnie Johnston was in breach of work-hour regulation­s, having driven for about six and a half hours without a break.

He told investigat­ors he did not realise the trailer had detached until he heard a thud and saw wreckage in his rear-view mirror.

WorkSafe said Johnston’s Direct Logistics failed to undertake regular and effective inspection­s of its vehicles, and failed to identify the deteriorat­ion of the tow ball and coupling.

WorkSafe area manager, Danielle Henry said, “The company had a duty to ensure the health and safety of other people was not adversely affected by its work. Johnston’s should have been doing regular inspection­s of all its vehicles including the trailers couplings and tow balls to ensure they were safe and roadworthy.”

The company should also have ensured its vehicles had current warrants or certificat­es of fitness.

Johnston’s should have identified and logged the maximum weight every towing vehicle and trailer could manage, to ensure that towing componentr­y was rated safe for use.

“This tragedy should serve as a warning to other businesses to keep a much closer eye on basic maintenanc­e. A young girl’s life has been lost through no fault of her own, and her whānau is forever impacted,” Henry said.

In court, Johnston’s director said he had not stopped thinking of the crash and could not begin to understand how the family felt. The driver had been badly affected by the accident and had not driven since.

“We’re a small family business, we get by day to day and we know any penalty the company receives or reparation the company is ordered to pay will not be adequate replacemen­t for the life of Storie.”

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