Former Port of Auckland CEO Tony Gibson has taken the stand in his own defence at an unprecedented trial into a workplace death, speaking of his love for the port, his honour to have led the organisation and his unwavering commitment to keeping people safe.
Gibson, 69, is on trial at Auckland District Court over the 2020 port death of 31-year-old stevedore and father-of-seven Pala鈥檃mo Kalati.
He faces two charges laid by Maritime NZ. It is the first time a New Zealand chief executive has been charged over a workplace fatality.
Gibson was today the first defence witness called to the stand. After being sworn in, he told the court he had never been convicted of a crime or charged with any offence previously.
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.
Maritime NZ argues Gibson failed to use his 鈥渋nfluence, power and resource鈥 as a corporate officer to ensure frontline workers were kept safe before Kalati was crushed by a container while unloading a ship at the Fergusson Container Terminal.
However, Gibson told the court he had been instrumental in improving the port鈥檚 health and safety culture and implementing systems designed to 鈥渒eep people healthy and safe鈥.
Under his decade-long tenure, health and safety was given 鈥減resence and visibility at the company. It was the first item on the agenda at board meetings, with health and safety updates included in both CEO and board reports.
He said he developed a 鈥減ort fit鈥 programme to keep staff and their families fit and healthy, and banned stevedores from working double shifts due to health and safety risks around fatigue.
He was also instrumental in promoting trainers into newly established roles of operational performance coaches, who were responsible for high-level training of workers in critical frontline roles.
鈥淚 love the port, I still do,鈥 he told the court. 鈥淭he people are magic. The families there, there鈥檚 generations. It was an honour and privilege and I put everything into being the CEO at the time.鈥
Former Ports of Auckland CEO, Tony Gibson (right) is on trial over the death of stevedore Pala鈥檃mo Kalati (inset) who was struck by a falling container on August 30, 2020.
Gibson also talked about his senior management team and their various channels of responsibility, including for health and safety.
Asked for his views on delegation, he replied: 鈥淚 think any organisation to be successful has to have delegation.
鈥淯ltimately as CEO you鈥檝e got to trust your officers. If you don鈥檛 get to the point where you trust them, something has to change.鈥
Gibson鈥檚 lawyer John Billington KC opened the defence case by saying Gibson didn鈥檛 have to give evidence before the court.
鈥淗e wants to give evidence. He would like your honour to understand that he was an authentic leader in health and safety and he hopes that your honour will judge him as such. He was the same person at work as he was at home.鈥
Billington said port workers who had already given evidence had spoken of Gibson as being 鈥渄iligent鈥, 鈥渃onscientious鈥 and a 鈥済ood person鈥.
He said this case must be assessed according to the unique context of Gibson鈥檚 role in a large and complex company operating during an unprecedented global pandemic.
Pala'amo Kalati (right) with wife Dro and six of their seven children: Jairus, Mischa, Azra, Braxton, Sarai and Iman.
Billington told the court the prosecution had effectively treated Gibson as if he was the 鈥減rincipal health and safety manager with expertise, and not the CEO鈥.
It would be argued that Maritime NZ had therefore 鈥渂lurred the lines鈥 between the obligations of the legally responsible PCBU (person conducting a business or undertaking) and those of his client, 鈥渁s just one of the officers of POAL鈥.
鈥淢r Gibson has never sought to avoid his responsibilities to the port. He does not do so now.鈥
The trial continues before Judge Steve Bonnar.
Lane Nichols is a senior journalist and deputy head of news based in Auckland. Before joining the Herald in 2012, he spent a decade at Wellington鈥檚 Dominion Post and Nelson Mail.
This article was originally published on the NZ Herald
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