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OH&S

Worker's fall through skylight brings fine for Chelmsford building centre

DCN-JOC News Services
Worker's fall through skylight brings fine for Chelmsford building centre

SUDBURY, ONT. — North West Lumber Co. was convicted and fined for violating the Occupational Health and Safety Act after a worker it employed fell through the roof of a shed on the site of a Home Hardware Building Centre it operated near Sudbury, Ont.

The incident occurred at the Home Hardware on Errington Avenue in Chelmsford on Feb. 27, 2018. A worker who was removing snow from the roof of a shed fell through a skylight. The worker was not using safety equipment as required by law while working at the shed in which lumber and other building supplies were stored.

In the winter of 2018-19 there was a large accumulation of snow on the building, recounted a Ministry of Labour report. In December/January, structural deformation of a horizontal support beam on the west side of the shed was observed. A third-party contractor was employed to remove the snow load with the assistance of North West employees.

A few weeks later, further bowing and cracking of another structural support beam on the east side was observed.

On the day in question, a yard supervisor assembled two employees of North West for the purpose of removing the accumulated snow load to prevent further structural damage to the building. The third-party contractor was not engaged to perform work on this occasion.

That morning the three employees held a brief meeting to discuss the snow clearing work. One of the topics was the presence of skylights on the shed roof. These were sheets of corrugated plastic, each two feet wide and seven feet long, mounted to the shingled roof surface.

One of the skylights was at a location near the snow to be cleared. No identification markers were placed to demarcate the skylight, which was more than 17 feet above the floor of the shed.

All three workers ascended to the roof of the shed and began pushing snow off the sloped roof, which was more than 11 feet above the ground at the edge. None of the three was wearing any type of fall protection equipment and no guardrails were in place at the roof edge or around the skylights. There had been no discussion of fall protection at the morning meeting and no fall protection equipment was provided to the workers by North West.

After lunch one of the workers returned to the roof of the shed and continued clearing snow. While doing so the worker stepped on the skylight, broke through and fell to the ground below, suffering injuries.

The supervisor returned to the shed roof to finish clearing the snow and to measure the skylight opening and install a temporary cover. The supervisor was not wearing fall protection.

The injured worker did not have training in working at heights.

The company was convicted in provincial offences court in Sudbury Dec. 1 and fined $55,000 for the offence of failing as an employer to ensure the measures and procedures prescribed by section 85(a) of the Regulation for Industrial Establishments were carried out in a workplace, contrary to section 25(1)(c) of the Occupational Health and Safety Act.

The regulation requires workers to use a safety belt or harness and lifeline when exposed to the hazard of falling more than three metres.

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