Exhausted rail welders killed in van crash

Grant Prior 5 years ago
Share

Two railway welders died in a road traffic accident as a result of their employer, Renown Consultants Ltd, failing to ensure that they were sufficiently rested to work and travel safely.

Nottingham Crown Court heard that Zac Payne, 20, and Michael Morris, 48, died on 19 June 2013 when Payne fell asleep at the wheel of the work van and came off the motorway,  crashing into a parked van, while driving back to Doncaster after a night shift in Stevenage.

The previous day Payne had left Doncaster at 4.30am and driven to Alnmouth, Northumberland, arriving at 7.30am to carry out work on the railway.

The expected work did not take place, so after waiting until midday Payne started the drive back to Renown’s Doncaster depot, arriving at 3pm.

On his way to the depot he was asked to take on an overnight railway welding job in Stevenage and, in company with Morris, they set off from the depot at 7.18pm arriving at the site at 9.47pm.

The two men then undertook welding jobs from 11.15pm leaving the site once they had finished at 3.40am.

The crash occurred at around 5.30am as Payne was driving back to Doncaster.

The Office of Rail and Road (ORR) told the court that Payne, who like his colleague was employed on a zero-hours contract, was suffering the effects of fatigue and may have fallen asleep at the wheel or  experienced ‘microsleeps,’ which hugely increased the risk of a traffic accident.

The court was told that Network Rail had asked Renown for an additional welding team for the Stevenage job at 7.30am on 18 June and Renown had accepted the job before considering if it had sufficient well-rested employees and before speaking to Payne.

The company did not follow its own fatigue management procedures, nor did it comply with the working time limits for safety critical work, such as welding, which insist there should be a ‘minimum rest period of 12 hours between booking off from a turn of duty to booking on for the next’.

ORR found that Renown’s policies and procedures were particularly inadequate because employees were on zero hours contracts, and these contracts created an obvious incentive for employees to volunteer for work when they were too tired as they were only paid for the shifts they worked.

This was made worse as Payne, and other trainee welders, were reliant on Renown for securing the qualifications they needed to qualify as welders, which discouraged them for refusing shifts.

Ian Prosser, Chief Inspector of Railways said: “Our thoughts are with the family and friends of Mr Payne and Mr Morris.

“The rail industry relies on a huge workforce of skilled manual staff often working at night and on shifts. Fatigue is a real and known risk which reduces alertness and affects performance.

“Today’s tragic case shows the fatal consequences that can occur when fatigue policies are disregarded.

“Safety comes first and ORR will continue to monitor and take action where companies do not take sufficient care to ensure their workforce is not too tired to work.”

Renown Consultants Ltd was found guilty of safety breaches and will be sentenced at a later date.

Latest news

Mace construction head steps down

Andrew Jackson leaves top role after three months
3 mins ago

Multiplex in talks for ISG’s £70m London offices to labs job

Plan to restart Regent Quarter life science campus with ISG project team
2 hours ago

M&E firm goes under after more than 70 years in business

HBS Group Southern employed 75 staff
18 hours ago

Trio of big names win £600m biscuit factory revamp

Developer Greystar confirms deals for McLaren, McAleer & Rushe and Sisk
20 hours ago

HS2 London tunnels chief joins Transpennine Route Upgrade

James Richardson will take up MD role at TRU in New Year
2 hours ago

Transport minister signals HS2 will run to Euston

Decision expected in spending review and budget later this month
18 hours ago

£9bn Lower Thames Crossing decision delayed 7 months

Fears grow mega project could be axed in upcoming Budget
19 hours ago

Vistry issues profit warning over build out costs at southern division

Probe launched after £115m hit on 9 schemes where build costs under estimated by 10%
1 day ago

ISG administrator tells subbies no funds to pay debts

EY warns trade creditors they are unlikely to see any of the cash they are owed
1 day ago

Giga factory powers McAlpine to top of contracts league

Work winning for the top 50 firms rebounded in September after August lull
1 day ago

Merit to build £30m modular NHS medicines centre

Specialist starts work on offsite components
1 day ago

Buckingham supply chain hit soars above £300m

Unpaid bills from unsecured creditors keep mounting
2 days ago

Mapping experts take control of buried pipes register

Ordnance Survey to help ensure safe digging and excavation
1 day ago

Winners of £3bn London housing major works deal

Graham, Kier, McLaren, Morgan Sindall, Vinci and Wates win places
2 days ago

BBC brickies firm went down owing £2m to suppliers

Hodgkinson Builders sold for £95,300 in pre-pack deal
2 days ago

Network Rail reveals top suppliers spend

BAM leads as biggest civils rail contractor
2 days ago

Go-ahead for £125m Immingham Ro-Ro terminal

Dragados is lined up to deliver the terminal which includes three new berths
2 days ago

Renew buys onshore wind firm for £50m

Full Circle deal adds 160 specialist technicians to workforce
2 days ago

New construction boss for Robertson North East

Neil Kennedy promoted to MD of Gateshead-based regional operation
2 days ago

Civils work fuels fastest output rise in two-and-a half years

Construction buyers see September surge
4 days ago

Barratt £2.5bn takeover of Redrow clears final hurdle

House building giants merger plan gets go-ahead after competition probe
4 days ago

Renew sells Walter Lilly building arm

100-year-old building business sold to luxury contractor Size
5 days ago

Work to start on Teesside and Merseyside carbon capture schemes

Government commits £22bn funding to world's first industrial-scale carbon capture projects
5 days ago

Flagship £200m London Premier Inn scheme approved

700-bed hotel to be built on the Strand near Trafalgar Square
5 days ago

Kilnbridge appoints new construction director

Former McGee director Darren Wickins joins concrete frame specialist
5 days ago

HS2 trial to replace cement with baked clay

Extra funding for programme to replace cement in concrete with calcined clay
5 days ago

Subcontractors wanted across the South West

Register now for latest Constructionline event in Bristol
5 days ago

Galliford Try profits and revenue surge

Release of delayed building jobs and surging water spend boosts firm
6 days ago

Octavius Infrastructure national expansion push pays off

Revenue leaps 28% to £277m with order book at over £1bn
6 days ago

Skanska staff get access to digital doctors

Contractor launches benefit for staff and their families
6 days ago

Contractor services