CRANBOURNE STAR NEWS
Home » Kerty relives ‘horror’ day at work

Kerty relives ‘horror’ day at work

Kerty Godon says he wakes up most nights reliving the horror day he lost his workmate nearly two years on.

Mr Godon was working as a welder at a Cranbourne West factory when his workmate, 21-year-old Dillon Wu of Lynbrook, died after succumbing to fumes while working in a confined space.

Mr Wu had just been two weeks into a metal engineering apprenticeship with the training arm of The Australian Industry Group while at the factory when he was found unconscious at the bottom of a large metal tanker about 10am on 4 October, 2018. He vividly recalled managers at the work site raising the alarm, shouting “Stop, stop, stop working, someone in a confined space”.

Mr Godon, 41, who now works at a factory in Dandenong, decided to speak publicly about the incident in the hope that Victoria’s new workplace manslaughter laws would send a clear message to employers that putting lives at risk would not be tolerated.

Under the laws introduced on 1 July, negligent employers now face fines of up to $16.5 million and individuals face up to 25 years in jail.

A WorkSafe Victoria spokesman said investigations were continuing into the Cranbourne West factory incident.

Meanwhile, Mr Godon, who described Mr Wu as “friendly” and a “really, really good guy”, said he was still struggling to comes to terms with Mr Wu’s death, and had become a “complete wreck”.

“I can’t sleep sometimes. All the time when I see the trailers, all the tankers on the road … just straight think about the incident.”

He said he wanted employers to be held accountable and not to “cut cost at the expense of safety”.

In a statement read out by Cranbourne MP Pauline Richards on behalf of Mr Godon at a Victorian Parliament sitting in November, 2019, it said: “Each day, I was getting more and more depressed; in a state of shock; on the verge of losing my sanity. I was going mad with the persistent recurrent nightmares.”

“I kept reliving the attempts of my colleagues trying, in a desperate move to resuscitate him but to no avail,” his statement read.

Ms Richards said the impact on Mr Wu’s colleagues and family “cannot be underestimated” and every worker “should be safe at work”

“This law shines the spotlight on that. I know Dillon’s case is still being investigated so I won’t go into specifics but it’s clear that it’s a really tragic example of why workplace safety is so important,” she said.

Digital Editions


  • Young players stars chase American dream

    Young players stars chase American dream

    A group of local young basketball players is set to take their skills international, with a life-changing educational trip to the United States planned for…

More News

  • Cracking start to the year

    Cracking start to the year

    **There are different ways of breaking a cricket bat. TOORADIN star Cal O’Hare has done it twice the conventional way; basically being too good for his own good; breaking two…

  • Cricket, Cranny and Carlos

    Cricket, Cranny and Carlos

    BLAIR: Well fellas, we’re back for Let’s Talk Sport and there’s no shortage of things to chat about. Cricket season is getting to the pointy end and we’ve had plenty…

  • What’s on

    What’s on

    Rock in the outdoors Two powerhouses of Australian rock Kutcha and Cash Savage & The Last Drinks in a unique collaboration. Supported by Canisha. Part of a free six-week outdoor…

  • Homelessness crisis deepens in Victoria as social housing funding declines

    Homelessness crisis deepens in Victoria as social housing funding declines

    Newly released figures have revealed that more Victorians are being turned away from homelessness services as social housing spending is cut by 9 per cent. New data from the Productivity…

  • Empowering migrant water safety

    Empowering migrant water safety

    Dr Harpreet Singh Kandra often recalls the story of his nearly fatal drowning when he was a boy. The community volunteer and academic at Federation University, remembers the moment he…