Toronto Hydro fined $200K for workplace fatality
Toronto Hydro will pay a fine of $200,000 for its role in an incident that led to a worker’s death.
The electricity distributor entered a guilty plea in court, and will pay a 25-percent surcharge to a special fund that assists victims of crime.
The incident occurred in August 2020 at a worksite on Willard Avenue in Toronto.
On the day of the incident, a six-person crew from Toronto Hydro was sent to a worksite to perform work in an underground electrical vault. The crew was to disconnect energized secondary cables to a transformer so that the transformer could be removed and replaced later by a different crew.
When the crew arrived, they began work by completing a work site risk assessment form and discussing the contents of the form, including who would perform the various elements of the task. The roles and responsibilities of each crew member were discussed and agreed to, with each member then getting into position.
Stationed above ground, one crew member passed equipment below into the vault. A second crew member received the tools and, as needed, passed tools within the vault.
With help from the crew, an apprentice and another worker manually disconnected the secondary cables connected to the transformer while wearing insulated rubber gloves. Together, the crew completed the work of disconnecting the secondary cables.
After completing the task, a reading was taken indicating that the current on the cables was too high. To reduce the current, the crew had to perform a different task involving the connection of a previously removed tie-cable to another service cable.
During the connection of the final cable, the worker was still wearing insulated rubber gloves while securing a bolt with a box wrench and holding an impact gun in the other hand.
The worker came into contact with low voltage electricity. The electrical shock injured the worker and caused the worker to fall.
The worker was taken to hospital but succumbed later to their injuries sustained as a result of the electrical contact.
Toronto Hydro was found liable for failing to ensure every reasonable precaution had been taken to prevent hazards to workers from energized electrical equipment, installations and conductors.