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Innisfil construction compay fined after worker falls 21 feet

MTN Construction fined $60K; worker suffered serious injuries at Waterloo worksite
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NEWS RELEASE
MINISTRY OF LABOUR, TRAINING AND SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
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Convicted: MTN Construction Inc., head office at 2441 Doral Dr., Innisfil, Ont., carrying on business as a concrete formwork contractor for the construction industry.

Location of workplace: A project to construct a high-rise condominium building at 128 King St. N., Waterloo.

Description of offence: A worker fell 21 feet to the ground, sustaining injuries. Workers had not been given site-specific training nor had they been trained on where and how to properly tie off their fall protection equipment on this job site.

Date of offence: Feb. 10, 2020.

Date of conviction: April 19, 2021.

Penalty imposed:
    •    Following a guilty plea in provincial offences court in Kitchener, MTN Construction Inc. was fined $60,000 by Justice of the Peace Laura Y. Gorczynski Plate; Crown Counsel Judy L. Chan.
    •    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:
    •    In 2020, CTN King Inc. was developing a construction project and retained MTN Construction Inc. to provide the concrete formwork at the project.
    •    By Feb. 10, 2020, the concrete work at the project had progressed to the third floor of the building. That morning two MTN workers were installing column formwork for the walls on the perimeter of the third floor.
    •    The forms were made to be installed on reinforcing steel (rebar) already in place. In certain places, the rebar was bent 90 degrees at the top, requiring the formwork to be split into two L-shaped forms in order to fit around the rebar. Workers had installed between 50 and 150 similar columns, some of which were of the same L-shaped type. The forms were lifted into place by a tower crane.
    •    That morning one worker directed the crane operator to lower the first L-shaped form, where it was affixed around the rebar. One side of the form was on the exterior south side of the floor, and the other was on the interior east side.The worker installed one shoring post (a type of scaffolding) on an angle to support the interior side of the form. Although it was the normal practice to also brace the exterior side, in this instance no shoring or bracing was installed to support the exterior side.
    •    The worker tied fall protection equipment on to the first L-shaped formwork once it was in place. The crane then moved the second L-shaped formwork section to the third floor. Moving it into place was more difficult because of the bend in the rebar, and it was requiring some manipulation by the crane operator and by the worker at the floor level.
    •    At some point, the centre of gravity of the first formwork section shifted south, away from the building, and the approximately-550-pound formwork fell over the edge of the building, pulling the worker who was tied to it to the ground.
    •    As a result of falling approximately 21 feet to the ground, the worker sustained serious injuries.
    •    An investigation conducted by the Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development determined that while MTN had a written formwork procedure, workers had not been specifically trained on this written procedure and were not aware there was a specific written procedure, although they were aware that bracing was required. In any event, the procedure did not contain any specific procedure for bracing formwork. In particular, while it was MTN's usual practice to install a shoring post to brace a form in one direction and a 2"x4" piece of lumber to brace the other direction, there was no specific procedure requiring this to be done.  In addition, the formwork engineering drawings did not include any information on how forms should be braced.
    •    All workers had working at heights training, but had not been given site-specific training, and had not been trained on where and how to properly tie off their fall protection equipment on this jo b site. MTN had a site tie-off procedure, but none of the workers had been trained on it prior to the incident. Fall protection equipment was made available to workers, but it was left to the workers to decide which type of fall arrest equipment was appropriate for any given circumstance.
    •    Section 25(1)(c) of the Occupational Health and Safety Act states that an employer shall ensure that the measures and procedures prescribed by the act and its regulations are complied with. Section 31(1)(b) of the Regulation for Construction Projects prescribes that "every part of a project, including a temporary structure...shall be adequately braced to prevent any movement that may affect its stability or cause its failure or collapse."
    •    MTN Construction Inc. failed to ensure that the measures and procedures prescribed by section 31(1) of the regulation were complied with at the workplace, contrary to section 25(1)(c) of the act. This is an offence pursuant to section 66(1) of the act.

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