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Former Port of Auckland boss on trial for workplace death in unprecedented prosecution

Author
Lane Nichols, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 22 Apr 2024, 7:13am
Former Ports of Auckland CEO Tony Gibson and Pala'amo Kalati (background) killed at the port in 2020. (Photo / 九一星空无限)
Former Ports of Auckland CEO Tony Gibson and Pala'amo Kalati (background) killed at the port in 2020. (Photo / 九一星空无限)

Former Port of Auckland boss on trial for workplace death in unprecedented prosecution

Author
Lane Nichols, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 22 Apr 2024, 7:13am

Former Port of Auckland boss Tony Gibson failed to use his 鈥渋nfluence, power and resource鈥 to ensure frontline workers were kept safe before a stevedore was fatally crushed by a container, an unprecedented court case has heard.

The former Port of Auckland Limited (POAL) chief executive has gone on trial in a first- of-its-kind prosecution in New Zealand over the 2020 workplace death of 31-year-old father-of-seven Pala鈥檃mo Kalati.

Gibson, 69, faces two charges laid by Maritime NZ. It is the first time a New Zealand chief executive has been charged over a workplace fatality.

The prosecution has been brought under tough new health and safety laws introduced following the Pike River mine disaster aimed at holding senior company officers to account for exposing workers to risk of serious injury or death.

If convicted, Gibson - who resigned in 2021 following a string of deaths and serious incidents at the port - could be fined up to $400,000.

The judge-alone trial is underway in the Auckland District Court before Judge Steve Bonnar. It is expected to last several weeks.

Maritime NZ prosecutors claim there were 鈥渟ystemic deficiencies鈥 in terms of health and safety procedures at the port under Gibson鈥檚 watch.

They argue Gibson failed to use his 鈥渋nfluence, power and resource鈥 around the boardroom and executive to properly monitor those failures and ensure necessary steps were taken to keep workers safe.

It is also claimed that Gibson should have been 鈥渙n notice鈥 of the deficient safety culture following four previous health and safety prosecutions during his decade-long tenure as chief executive.

It鈥檚 alleged those convictions should have made Gibson aware of significant inadequacies in the port鈥檚 health and safety systems, and the critical need for immediate work to revise and rectify those risks.

鈥淎n officer who can influence the organisation鈥檚 health and safety performance must do all that they are reasonably able to do: the buck stops with them,鈥 prosecutors allege.

Former Port of Auckland chief executive Tony Gibson was charged under  the Health and Safety at Work Act over the death. The charges are unprecedented for an executive of a major NZ company. Photo / Doug Sherring

Former Port of Auckland chief executive Tony Gibson was charged under the Health and Safety at Work Act over the death. The charges are unprecedented for an executive of a major NZ company. Photo / Doug Sherring

However, Gibson鈥檚 defence lawyer John Billington, KC, says his client cannot be held 鈥渃riminally negligent鈥 for the tragedy of Kalati鈥檚 death.

While Gibson had overall responsibility for port operations, he was not personally liable for the failures of individual systems and staff over which he had no direct control, Billington argued.

鈥淗e was but one of 650 employees at the time, albeit the most senior. The conduct of POAL is not attributable to Mr Gibson.鈥

The accident which claimed the life of Pala鈥檃mo Kalati

Kalati was employed as a 鈥渓asher鈥, responsible for securing containers on ships ahead of transportation, and unfastening them before they were unloaded from berthed vessels by cranes.

At about 2am on August 30, 2020, stevedores were discharging cargo from the container vessel MV Constantinos P at the Fergusson Container Terminal.

A crane was lifting two containers from the deck when a third container, still partially fastened, accidentally lifted before breaking free and crushing Kalati as he worked below.

Pala'amo Kalati (right) with wife Dro and six of their seven children: Jairus, Mischa, Azra, Braxton, Sarai and Iman. Photo / Supplied

Pala'amo Kalati (right) with wife Dro and six of their seven children: Jairus, Mischa, Azra, Braxton, Sarai and Iman. Photo / Supplied

Maritime NZ launched an investigation into the death, eventually charging Gibson and also laying two charges against POAL under the Health and Safety at Work Act.

The company pleaded guilty and was fined $500,000 in December last year. Gibson pleaded not guilty in 2022 and his trial began this month.

鈥楧iscrete personal and positive duty of care鈥

Opening submissions by Maritime NZ prosecutors, obtained by the聽Herald, allege Gibson had a 鈥渄iscrete personal and positive duty of care鈥 in relation to port health and safety procedures given his role as chief executive.

But it鈥檚 alleged Gibson failed to exercise reasonable 鈥渃are, diligence, and skill鈥 or take all practicable steps to minimise or eliminate critical risks.

These included:

*听Ensuring a safe distance rule for workers operating near cranes was clearly documented and effectively implemented;

*听Ensuring there were safe processes for co-ordination between lashers and crane operators working on ships;

*聽Assessing the risk of merging frontline roles during the Covid-19 pandemic response which the prosecution claims increased the 鈥渞eadily foreseeable鈥 risk to lashers;

*聽Verifying health and safety processes at the port to ensure they were adequate and effective.

It鈥檚 alleged these failures ultimately 鈥渃rystallised in Mr Kalati鈥檚 demise鈥.

The prosecutors acknowledged the case was the first of its kind in which a large corporate chief executive had faced health and safety charges for 鈥渘ot exercising their influence and control鈥.

Pala'amo Kalati was crushed when a container was dropped during a lifting operation in August 2020. Photo / 九一星空无限

Pala'amo Kalati was crushed when a container was dropped during a lifting operation in August 2020. Photo / 九一星空无限

鈥淏ut the fact the prosecution is in this sense 鈥榰nprecedented鈥 does not mean that it is unprincipled,鈥 the submission says.

In enacting the Health and Safety at Work Act in 2015, Parliament鈥檚 鈥渆xpress intention鈥 was to promote accountability of officers in senior leadership positions 鈥 鈥渆specially those at a distance from day-to-day operational and safety decision-making because of their seniority鈥.

The prosecutors drew on Australian research which found that corporate officers responsible for worker safety should be exposed to a 鈥渕eaningful personal risk of regulatory action鈥.

Personal liability, backed by credible enforcement, was 鈥渢he single most important motivator of CEOs鈥.

鈥楶OAL is not Mr Gibson鈥

Billington鈥檚 submission acknowledged Kalati鈥檚 death, stressing that nothing said in Gibson鈥檚 defence should be interpreted as minimising or undermining that tragedy.

He said it was appropriate that POAL pleaded guilty to Maritime NZ charges over the fatality.

The 鈥渃umulative actions and omissions of various workers鈥, including the person who authorised Kalati to work near the operating crane, were attributed to POAL in terms of liability, Billington said.

鈥淭he fundamental feature of this case is that POAL is not Mr Gibson.鈥

Billington stressed that while Gibson held a senior leadership position at the port, this client had been just one link in a chain of command overseeing hundreds of workers.

John Billington, KC, is representing former Port of Auckland chief executive Tony Gibson in a first of its kind health and safety prosecution.

John Billington, KC, is representing former Port of Auckland chief executive Tony Gibson in a first of its kind health and safety prosecution.

He referenced a similar Australian case from March this year which found that a managing director 鈥渃annot know everything that is going on at any given moment. To run a corporation there must be a level of delegation.鈥

Under Gibson鈥檚 watch, emphasis was placed on developing and improving health and safety systems, Billington said.

Gibson was instrumental in developing complex operating systems during the Covid-19 response to safeguard workers while allowing international freight operations to continue.

鈥淲e stress the importance of this because it demonstrates how seriously POAL took its obligation to the country and its staff, under Mr Gibson鈥檚 leadership,鈥 the submission said.

Stevedore Pala'amo (Amo) Kalati, 31, was crushed when a container was dropped during a lifting operation at 2am on August 30, 2020. Photo / Michael Craig

Stevedore Pala'amo (Amo) Kalati, 31, was crushed when a container was dropped during a lifting operation at 2am on August 30, 2020. Photo / Michael Craig

At the time of the accident, there was already a 鈥渇undamental and documented obligation鈥 for workers to maintain a safe exclusion zone of three container widths when working around overhead cranes.

Ultimately the case turned on what the law required of a reasonable officer acting in the same circumstances as Gibson, Billington said.

鈥淭his is not a case of a CEO sitting in an ivory-tower, disengaged from health and safety or his workforce.鈥

The trial continues.

Lane Nichols is a senior journalist and deputy head of news based in Auckland. Before joining the聽贬别谤补濒诲听in 2012, he spent a decade at Wellington鈥檚 Dominion Post and Nelson Mail.

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