DRYDEN, ONT.—McKenzie Lumber Inc. has been found guilty and sentenced to pay $48,000 after a worker’s arm was crushed by an industrial lag-sawing machine in March 2013.
The Ministry of Labour (MOL) states that workers were on the McKenzie Lumber Inc. worksite at 120 Mills Rd. in Hudson, Ont. which is near Sioux Lookout, and were using an industrial saw machine that cuts round logs into board lumber.
The machine’s master control panel contains the lock-outs for the electrical and hydraulic systems, the MOL explains, and a field control box is used to open and close the ‘clamshell.’ This portion contains the saw towers as well as the machine’s side canters (the side canters grip the logs in place).
On the day of the incident the machine had a breakdown and a production worker on the shift was notified.
The operator turned the machine off and went to the master control panel to lock out the electrical breakers and then left the area. The side canters were not blocked by the operator and the clamshell was open, revealing the side canters.
"Normally, if a clean-out procedure needed to be done between the side canters, the hydraulics to the canters would be locked out on the master control panel. However, a worker had been called in to do maintenance on the saw blades, and the usual procedure was to leave on the hydraulics so the saw tower could be raised to allow the work on the saw blades to be done," the release reads. "This meant the canters were also open, as they were operated using the same hydraulics and field control box as the saw tower."
When the saw change was being carried out, an alarm sounded and the production worker noted that a piece of metal was on the machine’s conveyor belt. The worker then took the metal piece and left the area.
Meanwhile, the saw maintenance work was finished and the worker assigned to that task went to the field control box to switch it to "on" so that the side canters would close, the MOL reports.
"The worker did not notice that the production worker had climbed into the machine near the side canters and was gesturing with an arm into the area below the side canters," the release states. "The side canters grabbed the production worker’s arm and the arm was crushed."
The court found that the company "failed to carry out the measures and procedures required by Ontario Regulation 851 — the Industrial Establishments Regulation — and the Occupational Health and Safety Act." According to the MOL, Section 75(b) of the regulations states that "a part of the machine, transmission, machinery, device or thing shall be cleaned, oiled, adjusted, repaired or have maintenance work performed on it only when…any part that has been stopped and that may subsequently move and endanger a worker has been blocked to prevent its movement."
The case went to trial, which took place on Dec. 1, 2014 in Sioux Lookout. Justice of the Peace Danalyn MacKinnon handed down her decision on March 19, 2015 in Dryden court. The sentencing took place on Aug. 11 in Dryden.
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