Coronial
TASother

Coroner's Finding: Russell, Allan Geoffrey

Deceased

Allan Geoffrey Russell

Demographics

72y, male

Date of death

2015-04-14

Finding date

2019-05-10

Cause of death

drowning

AI-generated summary

Allan Geoffrey Russell, 72, a non-swimming deckhand, drowned after a tender dinghy capsized while operating independently from a larger abalone fishing vessel. He was not wearing a lifejacket when found in water aged 14°C despite legal requirement. The employer (single diver, one-person company) made informal assumptions about Russell's swimming ability without verification, did not ensure proper lifejacket servicing, and relied on ineffective verbal safety instructions. The dinghy was seaworthy despite minor defects. Critical failings were inadequate employment screening and informal safety practices in small commercial fishing operations. Key clinical lessons: importance of lifejacket wear in cold water immersion, cold shock physiology, and supervisor responsibility for verifying worker capabilities before deployment in hazardous remote work.

AI-generated summary and tagging — may contain inaccuracies; refer to original finding for legal purposes.

Contributing factors

  • non-wearing of lifejacket
  • inability to swim
  • cold water immersion at 14°C
  • accidental capsize of tender dinghy
  • informal employment practices with unverified assumptions about worker capabilities
  • inadequate lifejacket servicing protocols
  • ineffective verbal safety instructions only
  • cold shock response impairing swimming ability

Coroner's recommendations

  1. The Tasmanian Abalone Council Ltd and WorkSafe Tasmania review the Tasmanian Abalone Industry Code of Practice and consider amendments in line with the system developed by the Abalone Industry Committee of Victoria that address the engagement and qualifications of deckhands, the wearing of lifejackets and the condition of vessels off which diving occurs (i.e. tender vessels such as the dinghy).
  2. The Australian Maritime Safety Authority review the survey requirements for tender vessels, noting that such vessels at times operate with considerable independence and autonomy.
  3. Critical importance of all persons spending time on the water wearing a correctly fitted and serviced lifejacket at all times.
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