Worker sustained a serious leg injury when a wall collapsed at a construction site
A Saskatchewan modular construction company has been ordered to pay $100,000 after a worker suffered a serious leg injury when a wall collapsed at a construction site in Corman Park.
3Twenty Modular was sentenced in Saskatoon Provincial Court on 13 November 2025 after pleading guilty to two violations of The Occupational Health and Safety Regulations, 2020, according to a Saskatchewan government report.
The charges stem from a 21 July 2023 incident in which “a wall at a construction site fell and landed on [a worker’s] leg,” seriously injuring the worker, the government said.
The company admitted to contravening subsection 13‑3(1) of the regulations, which requires employers and contractors to “ensure that every hoist, crane and lifting device, including all rigging, used at the place of employment is designed, constructed, installed, maintained and operated to perform safely any task for which the hoist, crane, lifting device or rigging is used.” The Saskatchewan government said the breach resulted in “the serious injury of a worker.”
3Twenty Modular also pleaded guilty to violating clause 14‑2(b) of the regulations. That provision requires employers and contractors to “ensure that any worker who is required or permitted to assemble, use, maintain or dismantle rigging is trained in safe rigging practices,” the government noted, adding that this failure likewise resulted in “the serious injury of a worker.”
On each count, the Court imposed a fine of $35,714.29 and a surcharge of $14,285.71, for a combined total of $100,000, the Saskatchewan government said. Two additional charges were stayed.
The Ministry of Labour Relations and Workplace Safety said it “works with employers and workers to eliminate workplace injuries and illnesses through education, intervention and enforcement.”