The HSA (Health and Safety Authority) released its annual report for 2016, detailing prosecutions made against businesses throughout last year for breaches in health and safety regulations – which included three agricultural businesses.
17 prosecutions took place in total – nine on indictment and eight summarily – with a total of €614,000 fines dished out.
Of the 17 prosecutions, cases were taken against three agricultural companies – namely Avoca Agri, Liffey Meats and Naas Farm Machinery.
Avoca Agri Ltd was brought before Arklow District Court on October 16, 2016, relating to an incident which took place on July 14, 2015. According to the HSA, Avoca Agri Ltd. failed to comply with health and safety regulations when an employee injured his left hand while removing a stone from the base of a screw auger/conveyor. Avoca Agri pleaded guilty to the charge and received a €500 fine.
Liffey Meats pleaded guilty to two charges before Virginia District Court, Co. Cavan, on July 19, 2016, for failure to provide information, training and supervision and failure to provide and maintain suitable
This case followed a serious incident on March 12, 2015, where an employee suffered serious injury resulting in eye loss following the explosion (or disintegration according to the report) of an agar jar in a laboratory. The company received a fine of €2,000.
Finally, Naas Farm Machinery went before Naas Circuit Court on December 1 last year pleading guilty to four charges.
The report details that the company “failed to ensure that no person under 18 years of age was employed to operate lifting equipment, employees were not provided with supervision and training necessary, and work at height was not properly planned or appropriately supervised”.
The company received a fine of €1,500 for each of the four charges resulting in a total fine of €6,000.
The largest fine handed out to a company in 2016 was €250,000, for a construction company, Vincent Ruane Construction Ltd; received for safety breaches regarding the construction of a wall.
Meanwhile, in its Statistics Report for 2016, the HSA revealed that of the 45 workplace fatalities last year, 23 were in the agriculture, forestry and fishery sector. The sector with the second highest level of fatalities was the construction sector with nine deaths.