28 August 2012

Workers 'had little training' to lay batts

A young man laying roof insulation was red-faced, sweating and irritable before he collapsed in a Sydney street after working in scorching hot conditions, an inquest has heard.

Glebe Coroner's court also heard on Monday of questionable training and workplace dangers as it inquired into the death of 19-year-old Marcus Wilson after he worked one day in the federal Labor government's subsidised home-insulation scheme.
The 19-year-old was the third person to die while working on the controversial program.

Mr Wilson collapsed on November 2009 from hyperthermia after working in 45C-plus heat.
He was put into an induced coma and later died from organ failure.

Mr Wilson, who had no experience in the industry, had agreed to work on that hot Friday for a friend who was sick.

Co-worker Collin Cini noticed Mr Wilson looked unwell at a job in St Clair, in Sydney's west, but did not realise he was in trouble.
"I am sorry for the role I played, I'm sorry to the family," Mr Cini told the inquest.
Mr Cini had been working only for some weeks as a contractor for Pride Building NSW, which later was liquidated. He also had no experience but had attended a training course organised by the owner of Pride, Ryan Glover.
The instructor arrived late and Mr Glover pressed for a shortened course, which would have lasted less than 60 minutes, instead of the scheduled four hours' training, Mr Cini told the inquiry.
The course, delivered by Comsec Training in Lidcombe, did not cover installation or risk assessment, the inquiry heard.
Contractors did not sign agreements with Pride, there was no training for working in elevated, enclosed spaces and no one was supplied with thermometers to gauge roof cavity temperatures, the inquest heard.
Alan Lawson, who was in the roof insulation business for 45 years, worked as a contract inspector for Pride from October 2009 to January 2010.
He attended the course and said answers to the test questions were already written on the board.
"They didn't actually go into laying instruction," Mr Lawson told the inquiry.
He also said the course did not include information about working in an enclosed space, but it did address the impact of heatstroke.
Mr Lawson told the inquiry he recommended installers not work when the outside temperature exceeded 32 degrees but he believed Mr Glover would not let the heat delay a job.
"I knew that was the stand he would take," Mr Lawson told the inquiry.
"That the work would carry on."
The inquest continues on Tuesday.

ninemsn.com.au 20 Aug 2012

The government is responsible for a project failure, that being the 'free' insulation incentive (nee insulation scandal) , in which there was not only a huge cover up of the government letting criminals gangs together with individuals, walk free with the theft of  millions by each gang or individual, but now there are allegations of death of people as a result of a botched up business idea.

The lack of training, OH&S and education rests directly with the individuals who signed of on the government funded project.

Consequently, any deaths as a result of the inadequate procedures are directly attributed to government failure.

However no court will ever burden the government with this failure nor any individuals, who remain concealed from public scrutiny involved with this project.

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