AIM worker's death leads to 4 workplace safety charges against Saint John scrapyard - Action News
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New Brunswick

AIM worker's death leads to 4 workplace safety charges against Saint John scrapyard

American Iron and Metal Inc. is facing four workplace safety charges after the death of 60-year-old Darrell Richards

Darrell Richards died in the summer of 2022 after getting injured on the job

A man on a canoe, wearing life jacket, smiling
Darrell Richards died on July 1 after a workplace accident at American Iron and Metal in west Saint John. (Submitted by Rick Richards)

American Iron and Metal Inc. is facing four workplace safety charges after the death of a 60-year-old worker at a westSaint John scrapyard.

In June 2022, Darrell Richards was injured on the joband later died in hospital.WorkSafeNB has reviewed Richards' deathand found enough evidence to recommend charges against the metal recycling company.

The Crown has accepted thosechargesand is prosecuting AIM for allegedly failing toproperly protect, train and inform Richards, and failing to make sure work is overseen by trained supervisors.

Richards was injured while cutting into a calenderrollwith a saw. A calender roll is alarge cylinder, typically made of steel and sometimes covered in fibre, used to presspaper and plastic.When Richards cut into it, it decompressed, lacerating his leg and causing bleeding, said his daughter-in-law at an AIM-organized news conference last year.

All four charges are under New Brunswick's Occupational Health and Safety Act. The first charge alleges that AIMfailed to take every reasonable precaution to ensure the health and safetyof Richards. The second alleges it failedto provide information on the hazards of handling and disposing of a calender roll.

The third alleges AIMfailed to provide the information that is necessary for health and safety, and the fourth alleges it failed to ensure that work is competently supervised and that supervisors have sufficient knowledge.

If found guilty, each charge carriesa maximum fine of $250,000, a maximum of six months in jail, or both.

WorkSafeNB spokesperson Laragh Dooley provided details of each charge. Because the incident is now before the courts, she said "we are unable to release the report and cannot comment further."

There were no public notificationsabout the charges. Theywere officially laid in late February, Dooley said.

Piles of rusty metal in foreground, buildings in background
The American Iron and Metal facility at 145 Gateway Street in west Saint John. (Julia Wright/CBC)

Richards was the second worker to die on the job at AIM in a seven-month period, causing an outcryfrom local politicians and residents. The first worker, who was never publicly identified, died after getting swept out of a truck bed by a crane wielding a large ball of metal fencing used to clean out small debris.

WorkSafeNB recommended chargesagainst AIM in the death of the unidentified man, but the Crown rejected those charges because there was no reasonable chance of conviction.

AIMsigned a 40-year-lease for its scrapyard with the Port of Saint John in 2002 and has since been the site of fires and dozens of loud explosions. Mayors, a member of Parliament, and community members have called for AIM's licence to be suspended.