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Ecostore worker's eyes permanently damaged in chemical accident

Author
Raphael Franks,
Publish Date
Mon, 13 Jan 2025, 2:31pm

Ecostore worker's eyes permanently damaged in chemical accident

Author
Raphael Franks,
Publish Date
Mon, 13 Jan 2025, 2:31pm
  • An  worker鈥檚 sight was permanently damaged after hazardous chemicals sprayed into his eyes.
  • investigated and accepted Ecostore鈥檚 commitment to improve health and safety measures.
  • Ecostore paid over $20,000 in compensation and promised a 鈥渉olistic cultural shift鈥 in .

An Ecostore factory worker鈥檚 sight has been permanently damaged after a pressurised hose sprayed hazardous chemicals into his eyes while he was making dishwash powder.

WorkSafe investigated the incident, which happened in Pakuranga on March 7, 2023, and has today accepted Ecostore鈥檚 commitment to make health and safety improvements.

WorkSafe detailed the incident: 鈥淭he [worker] had completed blending the dry ingredients and commenced adding the liquid ingredients via the pressurised-pot spraying system.

鈥淗e had walked ... away from the spray system when one of the hose clamps failed,鈥 the safety watchdog said.

鈥淸This] caused a vertical spray of litres of mixture ... about 6 metres in the air from the pressure pot outlet.

鈥淭he [worker], who was initially well clear of the spray, walked back to the pressure pot to shut it down.

鈥淚n doing so, he was showered with liquid. He had not been trained to respond appropriately to a release of a pressurised substance and the correct use of PPE for such situations.鈥

WorkSafe said Ecostore acknowledged 鈥渢hat some workers, including the injured person, had not received adequate training in chemical safety, emergency procedures relating to chemical spills and a release of substance under pressure鈥.

Ecostore also acknowledged some workers had not been given adequate training about PPE requirements, were not given the appropriate PPE and the worker was incorrectly allowed to assess his own injuries and did not get the appropriate first aid.

Ecostore group chief operating officer Tony Acland said they 鈥渄eeply regret the serious harm experienced on our site鈥.

鈥淲e acknowledge the professional and personal impact such an experience has on an individual, as well as the wider team.

鈥淪afety is a cornerstone of Ecostore.

鈥淲e recognise the importance of going beyond just compliance, and we take our responsibility to ensure the health and safety of our employees incredibly seriously. We are committed to continuous improvement in this space and have already implemented numerous advancements.鈥

Ecostore applied to WorkSafe for an 鈥渆nforceable undertaking鈥, a binding commitment to make changes.

Ecostore called its changes a 鈥渉olistic cultural shift鈥, with a promise to install security cameras with artificial intelligence to identify health and safety issues and a new layout to protect workers.

The company has also paid the victim more than $20,000 in compensation and has funded a pilot training programme by Blind Low Vision NZ to support companies employing visually impaired workers.

Raphael Franks is an Auckland-based reporter who covers breaking news. He joined the Herald as a Te Rito cadet in 2022.

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