Your browser cannot play this flash file.
about us product & service directory product showcase events calendar links page advertising info readership & distribution contact us

Workplace fatality toll a “life or death” reminder

Twenty-six Victorian workers died in the 09/10 financial year due to lapses in workplace safety, WorkSafe Victoria has announced.

 

All but one of these workers was male – a female vineyard worker in Woori Yallock died after being struck by a falling branch during heavy storms in June.

 

Four of the fatalities occurred in Melbourne, and 22 in regional Victoria. Regional fatalities included the double fatality of a father and son at Rainbow, who were electrocuted when the windmill they were transporting struck an overhead powerline.

 

The workplace fatality toll for 2009/10 was one lower than the previous financial year, where 27 workplace fatalities were recorded.

 

“The workplace fatality toll serves as a continual reminder to employers and workers that health and safety can be a life or death matter,” WorkSafe’s Strategic Programs Director Trevor Martin said.

 

“We know the overwhelming majority of deaths and workplace injuries can be predicted and therefore prevented – however, complacency and simple mistakes are still killing people needlessly,” he said.

 

One third of the workplace fatalities for the 2009/10 year occurred on farms, compared to seven farming fatalities in the previous financial year. Of these nine fatalities, five involved tractors.

 

“Farmers are greatly over-represented in workplace fatalities - this is something we’re aware of and have discussed with the farming community.

 

“It’s why WorkSafe has just launched a campaign of inspector visits to farms across Victoria over the next 12 months. Inspectors will be targeting the most common causes of serious injury and death, with a particular focus on tractor safety,” Mr Martin said.

 

The fatality toll for 2009/10 also included three falls from heights ranging from a little over two metres to 20 metres. Five workers were electrocuted after contact with exposed wires on machinery, and striking underground and overhead power lines. A further four people died after being struck by sheets of glass, a bag of salt, computer equipment that fell from a forklift, and a tree branch.

 

Other fatalities included a lathe operator dying after being struck in the head by a metal rod he was shaping, and a man delivering beer kegs being overcome by a gas leak in a hotel cellar.

in this issue | about | product & service directory | product innovations | events | links | advertising | site index | newsletter | contact us
Copyright © 2006 TimesOnline