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Strategies & Market Trends : Dino's Bar & Grill

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To: Goose94 who wrote (36143)2/2/2018 5:16:10 PM
From: Goose94Read Replies (1) of 203566
 
Detour Gold (DGC-T) Dump Truck Tips Over, Mine Company Fined $70,000 for Worker's Injuries

Convicted: Detour Gold Corporation, 199 Bay Street, Toronto, Ontario.

Location: Workplace: Detour Lake Gold mine, about 185 km northeast of Cochrane, Ontario.

Description of Offence: A worker hauling rocks in a dump truck being operated in reverse was critically injured when the truck fell and flipped over on its roof. There was no berm (protective barrier) to support the truck and the road gave way beneath the truck.



Date of Offence: August 24, 2014.



Date of Conviction: November 27, 2017; Date of Sentence: February 1, 2018.



Penalty Imposed:



  • Following a trial, Justice of the Peace L.M. Scully fined Detour Gold Corporation $70,000 for failing to take the reasonable precaution of providing a suitable protective barrier along the open side of a haulage road. Decision rendered at Cochrane Town Hall, 171 Fourth Avenue, Cochrane; Crown Counsel Indira Stewart.
  • The court also imposed a 25-per-cent victim fine surcharge as required by the Provincial Offences Act. The surcharge is credited to a special provincial government fund to assist victims of crime.




Background:



  • A worker was instructed to haul rock over to the area at the top of a tailings dam. The time was 4 a.m. and heavy fog had rolled in, causing severely reduced visibility.
  • There was no berm (a protective barrier) on the side of the road where the rock was to be dumped. The rock being hauled was to be used by a bulldozer operator to widen the ramp and road and build a berm.
  • The worker reversed to the area where the rocks were to be dropped; the truck was too close to the edge of a very narrow section of the road, where there was no berm, and the road gave way beneath the truck, which fell and flipped over onto its roof.
  • The worker received critical injuries.
  • Berms provide both a physical barrier and a physical and visual guide for the equipment operators to prevent events such as this one.
  • The incident constituted an offence under the Occupational Health and Safety Act, section 25(2)(h): failing as an employer to take every precaution reasonable in the circumstances for the protection of a worker.


CONTACTS Janet Deline
Communications Branch
416-326-7405
For media inquiries only: MOLMedialine@ontario.ca



Ministry of Labour
ontario.ca

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