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A manufacturing company has been fined after a dad was drawn into a machine and broke his arm in two places.

The father-of-two from Hampshire, was unable to work for over a year following the incident on 12 March 2021.

He had been working a night shift at the company’s site when he noticed a build-up of butyl on the conveyor belt of the firm’s hot feed extruder machine. He then reached into the conveyor to find out how much of the material was blocking the machine. While doing this however, his left arm became trapped and entangled between the machine’s conveyor belt and pulley. This led to the ulna and radius bones in his left arm breaking with him later requiring surgery to fit metal plates in the arm. However, these plates broke after being fitted and led to him undergoing two more operations.

In a victim impact statement presented to the court, he said: “It was the combination of the incident itself and all of the time off as a result of the incident which depressed me. It was depressing not being able to do all of the things I would normally do. As a result of the time off I lost my partner and had to move out from my home.”

A Health and Safety Executive (HSE) investigation found that the company had failed to provide guarding to stop its workers from being exposed to dangerous areas on moving machinery.

The company pleaded guilty to breaching Regulation 11(1) of the Provision and Use of Work Equipment Regulations 1998. The company was fined £80,000 and ordered to pay £4,945.90 in costs at West Hampshire Magistrates’ Court on 23 June 2023.

HSE inspector Lucy Hacker said: “This incident was wholly avoidable, caused by the failure of the company to provide guarding. Employees should be physically prevented from getting into a position where they can come into contact with dangerous parts of machinery, and experience and procedures alone should not be relied upon to control risk. The risk of being drawn in and entangled in dangerous parts of conveyors is a well-known and well-documented machinery risk. The guidance on safe operation of extruders is well established and specifies the requirement for these hazards to be guarded.”

Source – HSE

HSCS Scotland Promoting a Healthier Workplace Through Safety
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