Action Taken Against Workers After Fatal Electrocution
Media release
3 May
2013
Disciplinary Action Taken
Against Electrical Workers After Fatal
Electrocution
An Auckland electrician and
electrical inspector have been found guilty of negligence
and creating a risk of serious harm after a home owner
received a fatal electrical shock.
Following a
disciplinary hearing into a complaint laid by the Ministry
of Business, Innovation and Employment’s Energy Safety
Group, the Electrical Workers Registration Board has found
Auckland electrician Brett Woodley McGehan and Auckland
electrical inspector Harry Martin Gedye guilty of
disciplinary offences under section 143(b)(ii) of the
Electricity Act 1992.
Mr McGehan was fined $7,000
and ordered to pay costs of $10,000. His practising licence
was previously suspended following receipt of the complaint.
It was later reinstated after he completed an approved
training course.
Mr Gedye was fined $6,000 and
order to pay costs of $10,000. His electrical inspector’s
registration has also been suspended until he successfully
completes a course of remedial training prescribed by the
Board.
The complaint lodged by Energy Safety
relates to electrical work undertaken on an Avondale home
owned by Trent Page in March 2010. While installing a new
mains cable, Mr McGehan transposed the phase and neutral
conductors at the mains point of entry, causing the earthing
system of the house to become electrically live. He did not
perform any testing as required by the Electricity
Regulations 1997 (which were in force when this work was
carried out). Mr Gedye failed to check the work was carried
out properly and did not detect the
transposition.
This transposition had fatal
consequences and led to the electrocution of Mr Page when he
went under his house to inspect a leak coming from the hot
water cylinder.
John Sickels, the Ministry’s
Registrar of Electrical Workers Licensing welcomes the
Board’s ruling and says he hopes it sends a clear message
to electrical workers.
“Electrical work is
hazardous and, if not performed correctly, can have
extremely serious consequences. There is no room for cutting
corners. The public need to know they can have confidence in
the safety and quality of electrical work carried out on
their homes,” he says.
Mr Sickels adds that some
media reports and electrical industry comment of Mr Page’s
death incorrectly suggested he had been carrying out DIY
electrical repairs when he accidentally touched a live wire
and was electrocuted.
“Any suggestion Mr Page was
partially responsible for causing his own death is
completely irresponsible and caused unnecessary distress for
his family and friends at what was already a very sad and
difficult
time.”
ENDS