Kier hit with 拢1.5m fine for incident on acquired firm May Gurney鈥檚 site

Three contractors have been hit with fines totalling 拢2m after a worker鈥檚 leg was crushed by a collapsed trench in Lincolnshire.

Vincent Talbot, 47, from Lincoln, suffered serious leg injuries from the incident on 9 March 2012, which happened while he was working on a May Gurney project to install new storm drains for the county council.

Talbot鈥檚 leg was broken in six places after the trench he was working in collapsed on him, trapping him for 15 minutes before being extracted by the fire and rescue service and then airlifted to hospital.

His right ankle has been left permanently damaged, pointing 10 degrees off line. He was off work for more than a year and vows never to work in a trench again.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found insufficient measures were taken to protect those working in trench, and a series of safety errors had led to the collapse.

The largest fine, of 拢1.5m, was for Kier - which bought May Gurney in 2013. Two further subcontractors, John Henry & Sons (Civil Engineers) Ltd and Lawless Civils Ltd, were fined 拢550,000 and 拢40,500 respectively.

Kier MG Ltd sub-contracted the installation work to John Henry & Sons (Civil Engineers) Ltd, who subsequently further sub-contracted the work to Lawless Civils Ltd. Mr Talbot was a self- employed contractor hired by Lawless Civils Ltd.

John Edwards, Kier Group, safety, health, environment and assurance director, said: 鈥淭his incident happened in 2012 and before Kier acquired May Gurney in 2013. Since the acquisition, the safety performance of May Gurney has improved significantly, with the Accident Incidence Rate reducing from 736 to 226.

鈥淥perating a safe and sustainable business is Kier鈥檚 number one priority. We have developed an industry-leading reputation for our rigorous approach to managing safety issues and for developing new approaches to safe working. We maintain our focus on the continuous improvement of safety standards.鈥

The court found John Henry & Sons (Civil Engineers) Ltd, failed to inform Kier MG of the appointment of Lawless Civils Ltd.

Lawless were approved contractors of Kier MG but not approved for this type of specialist excavation work.

Lawless appointed a supervisor who had never supervised work, he did not have the relevant training and qualifications to do so.

After the accident to Vince Talbot, John Henry & Sons (Civil Engineers) Ltd, backdated the method statement to give the impression that it was signed by the workers prior to the trench collapsing.

A three-metre long trench box shielded workers but the pipes being laid in the trench were six metres long, meaning workers weren鈥檛 protected over the length of the pipe.

Other trench support systems such as trench sheeting were not used, and the unsupported trench had water leaking into it.

The trench had been left open overnight and concrete was being used to bed the pipes in at the bottom of the trench, instead of pea gravel as specified by the client.

Water mixed with the concrete, making the pipe levelling process extremely difficult as the level of the pipe bed had to be continuously adjusted.

When Vince Talbot was attempting to level a pipe section for a second time, the sides of the trench collapsed and trapped him.

Kier MG Ltd (formerly known as May Gurney Ltd) of Tempsford Hall, Sandy, Bedfordshire, pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 22(1)(a) of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2007. They were fined 拢1.5million and ordered to pay 拢23,327.83.

John Henry & Sons (Civil Engineers) Ltd of Barnwell Road, Cambridge denied the charge but was found guilty, after a trial of breaching section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974. They were fined 拢550,000 and ordered to pay 拢166,217.86.

Lawless Civils Ltd of Doddington Road, Lincoln, pleaded guilty to breaching section 3(1) of the Health and Safety at Work etc Act 1974. They were fined 拢40,500 and ordered to pay 拢53,346.59.

HSE inspector Martin Waring said: 鈥淭his incident was foreseeable and avoidable and Mr Talbot鈥檚 injuries were the result of multiple failings by the duty holders, from the planning stage through to the execution of the project, resulting in the inevitable collapse of an unsupported trench. Sufficient trench support systems were not provided.

鈥淓ven while the excavation phase had begun, a catalogue of errors and omissions led to the injuries of Vincent Talbot. It is inevitable that at some time an unsupported trench will collapse, for this reason safe systems of work, should be in place in order to protect persons who work in trenches. We could easily have been dealing with a fatal incident.鈥