The Gold Coast Bulletin

TONNE OF TROUBLE

Coast crane company under investigat­ion after second fall

- BRIANNA MORRIS-GRANT

WORKPLACE Health and Safety is investigat­ing a Gold Coast crane company after another cable snapped yesterday sending a seven-tonne container crashing 20 metres to the ground. Authoritie­s said they would inspect two sites after separate incidents in 12 days, while the Constructi­on, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMMEU) is demanding the cranes stop work at the sites until they are fully checked.

WORKPLACE Health and Safety is investigat­ing a Gold Coast crane company after another cable snapped yesterday sending a seven-tonne container crashing 20 metres to the ground.

Authoritie­s said they would inspect two sites involving Falcon Cranes after separate incidents in 12 days.

The Constructi­on, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (CFMMEU) is demanding the cranes stop work at the sites until fully checked. Falcon Cranes accused the media of hurting a family business and said the union allegation­s were “completely false”.

In yesterday’s incident at Weemala St, Chevron Island, workers were moving the container, full of steel, when a crane cable snapped.

The Bulletin has been told the container dropped slightly and went into a spin before falling several storeys to the ground. No one was on the street at the time. Rawcorp Property Limited is building a nine-storey developmen­t on the site.

On March 7, a 500kg yellow hook – similar to the one that fell yesterday – fell 10 storeys on Bondi Ave, Mermaid Beach, narrowly missing an elderly woman walking by.

The union at the time alChevron leged the hoist-up limit on the crane was “not set” on the operator checklist.

Yesterday, CFMMEU Gold Coast official Scott Vink claimed the union had already attended “numerous” incidents at the Rawcorp site at Island. “This crane is nearing its 10-year expiry and should never have been erected in the first place as this job is going to be ongoing for at least another year,” he said.

“I believe other Falcon cranes to be operating with faults and that they should not operate until such time as an independen­t technician or engineer inspects their ageing fleet.”

A spokesman for Workplace Health and Safety Queensland (WHSQ) said the Chevron Island site would be closed and would remain so on a “day by day” basis as the investigat­ion continued.

“The crane is prohibited from being used until it has been inspected and deemed fit for purpose by a competent person,” the spokesman said.

“WHSQ can confirm that the investigat­ion into the Mermaid Beach crane failure on 7 March is ongoing.”

A woman claiming to be from Falcon Cranes contacted the Bulletin yesterday and said the media reports were hurting a “family business”.

“I know CFMEU just blurts out whatever little bits of informatio­n they want and dramatises it ... but it’s completely false,” she said.

The site manager was unavailabl­e for comment. A Rawcorp representa­tive hung up on reporters.

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 ?? Picture: TIM MARSDEN ?? A large skip and a crane hook fell six metres on to the road at the Chevron Island site.
Picture: TIM MARSDEN A large skip and a crane hook fell six metres on to the road at the Chevron Island site.

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