Feb 08, 2024

St Basil’s adjourns hearing, allegations of nine health and safety breaches

Untitled design - 2024-02-08T130938.782
State Coroner John Cain was investigating the death of the 45 residents but placed it on hold until the conclusion of the criminal charges. [Source: NCA NewsWire / Ian Currie]

A Melbourne aged care facility charged by WorkSafe with nine breaches of occupational health and safety legislation during a COVID-19 cluster has successfully had its court hearing delayed due to its underprepared legal team.

St Basil’s Home for the Aged saw 45 residents die from a deadly COVID-19 outbreak during the height of the pandemic in 2020 and the Victorian workplace health and safety regulator alleged the facility failed to require workers to wear Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) after being notified that a worker had tested positive to the virus.

WorkSafe also alleges the facility failed to train workers how to safely use protective equipment, verify staff were competent and supervise its use.

The facility was back in the Melbourne Magistrates Court on Wednesday for a three-day committal hearing but its legal representation, Conor O’Bryan, applied for an adjournment after an oversight saw him without crucial documentation from the State Coroner.

State Coroner John Cain was investigating the death of the 45 residents but placed it on hold until the conclusion of the criminal charges. 

News.com.au reported that Mr O’Bryan said the documents included an expert’s evidence that showed the facility was prepared for an outbreak as well as statements from senior nurses but that evidence was denied to him by Judge Cain as he had not used the proper procedures to obtain them. 

An adjournment was called for by Mr O’Bryan to allow him time to obtain the documents and that without the ability to present them to the court, the defence would be “hamstrung”. 

“It is an unfortunate situation,” he said.

WorkSafe opposed the adjournment, claiming the hearing had been booked nine months in advance and gave the defence plenty of time to prepare, also stating residents’ families were in court on the day ready for answers.

Magistrate Jarrod Williams “regrettably” granted the adjournment “with great reluctance” but considered the move to be a genuine oversight by St Basil’s’ defence team. 

The matter will return to court for a special mention on March 4.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Older Australians Are Less Worried About Becoming Infected Than Younger People

Older Australian’s are renowned for their resilience in times of crisis and it appears as though a large part of this attitude comes down to wishful thinking. Despite the well-known risk that COVID-19 poses to older people, the latest polling results published by The Essential Report shows that 74% of Australians over the age of... Read More

Visas granted to aged care nurse and family days before deportation

A South Australian aged care nurse and his family have been granted bridging visas, four days before they were set to be deported. Read More

Elderly driver allegedly bashed by tradies in road rage incident

An elderly driver allegedly reversed slightly to let another car merge. Moments later, two tradies jumped out of a truck and bashed him in broad daylight. Dashcam captured it all. When did simple road courtesy become a trigger for violence? Read More
Advertisement