Burton Mail

Theme park is fined £1 million after girl, 11, died on water ride

VENUE ADMITS HEALTH AND SAFETY BREACH FOLLOWING DEATH OF SCHOOLGIRL WHO FELL FROM RIDE AND DROWNED

- By JENNY MOODY jennifer.moody@reachplc.com @Jenny_moody85

A MAJOR Staffordsh­ire theme park has been fined £1 million after the death of a schoolgirl on one of its rides.

Dayton Manor theme park’s safety failings have been laid bare in court proceeding­s after the Health and Safety Executive launched a prosecutio­n against the operator.

It comes after 11-year-old Evha Jannath fell from a vessel on Splash Canyon, a river rapids ride, during a school trip in May 2017.

Evha, from Leicester, drowned after being jolted and falling into the water at the park, near Tamworth.

The theme park had earlier admitted a health and safety breach following the death of Evha, who studied at the Jameah Girls’ Academy school, The Mirror reports.

Stafford Crown Court heard this week how Evha was ejected from the boat on the water ride while standing up and later fell into 12ft of water after plunging from the conveyor belt which takes vessels to the ride exit.

Re-watching CCTV of the ride on the day of the accident, experts recorded 70 occasions of people standing up in the boats while on Splash Canyon.

Evha Jannath was on an end-ofyear school trip at the theme park with friends from Jameah Girls Academy in Leicester when she was jolted from a vessel on the Splash Canyon ride on May 9, 2017.

A prosecutio­n was brought against the park, based in Tamworth, by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) for not properly ensuring the safety of its guests, with Drayton Manor already admitting breaching Section 3 of the Health and Safety at Work Act.

At the start of a two-day sentencing hearing at Stafford Crown Court on Wednesday, James Puzey, barrister for the HSE, told the judge the accident happened “in context of the systemic failures of safety on this ride”.

“The control measures they had were failing every day,” he added.

A High Court judge heard from the park’s own barrister Richard Matthews QC, who said it was “a corporate failing”, reports Birmingham Live.

Evha was ejected from the boat while standing up out of her seat, and although initially unhurt, later fell into 12ft of water after plunging from the conveyor belt which takes vessels to the ride exit.

The HSE’S lawyers said there was “inadequate” signage for those on the ride telling them to stay seated, “inadequate training” for staff, an element of under-staffing and a lack of emergency planning.

Mr Puzey said static ride CCTV only covered 50 per cent of the course and was “not an effective means of monitoring the boats” or their passengers’ behaviour.

The court heard that although signs warned passengers to stay seated, people still got up – but Mr Puzey said the management of that risk was the ride operator’s responsibi­lity.

A technical analysis found that people standing up on the ride was “relatively frequent” and that on “nine per cent to 16 per cent” of journeys, passenger “misbehavio­ur” was observed.

Re-watching CCTV of the ride on the day of the accident, experts recorded 70 occasions of people standing up in the boats.

The court also heard that in separate incidents between 2011 and 2013, four people plunged from boats – or ended up being swept into what was the deepest part of the ride’s course, known as the trough, which is where Evha ended up drowning.

Although none of those falling passengers were injured, the court heard details of one involving a 10-year-old boy in August 2013 which bore similariti­es to the fatal incident.

The boy was ejected from the ride at the same point as Evha and – like her – was not spotted by ride staff, instead being pulled to safety by a quick-witted member of the public who climbed a safety rail.

After the fatal incident, a review concluded it was “an essential requiremen­t” that those overseeing the water ride made sure people stayed in seats, and could “detect and react” to passengers falling in.

“A passenger who is in the water and is in the trough is in immediate danger from a number of immediate hazards which pose risks of death or serious injury,” it said.

The review concluded: “It appears that the past experience of the defendant of having people go into water but thereafter being rescued were taken as assurance this was not a high-risk situation. Such an interpreta­tion would be seriously flawed.”

The ride’s then most-current risk assessment from April 2014 identified the fact “guests regularly fall in due to them standing up”.

Mr Puzey said: “It is clear from the risk assessment that the defendant was aware that guests had actually fallen in and this wasn’t a theoretica­l risk.”

The then Splash Canyon ride manager had said falls from the ride on any part of the course happened “once or twice” a year, the judge heard.

Just 27 days before the fatal incident, the ride’s operating staff raised issues with the visibility of the CCTV system, people getting out of their seats and the warning signs, at an after-hours work meeting.

Assessment of the ride CCTV showed that at no point were Evha or the four other classmates in her boat all sitting in their seats at the same time.

However, although one of the ride operator’s roles was to tackle such “misbehavio­ur” by using an oncourse loud speaker system, it was never once used on the day, the court heard.

Mr Puzey said Drayton Manor “accepts it failed to appreciate the seriousnes­s of risk identified in this case – falling out and not being rescued”.

The judge was told that Drayton Manor Parks Ltd, which operated the site at the time, is now in administra­tion with its assets – including the park – under new ownership.

Splash Canyon has never reopened since Evha’s death.

 ??  ?? Evha Jannath lost her life in the accident at Drayton Manor on a school trip in May 2017
Evha Jannath lost her life in the accident at Drayton Manor on a school trip in May 2017

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom