Nova Scotia

Ontario man, 55, dies after accident at fish-feed mill in Truro

Truro Police Chief David MacNeil said the man was making a delivery to the facility when the accident happened.

Police and the N.S. Dept. of Labour are investigating

Image of the symbol of the Truro police on the side of a police car.
A 55-year-old man suffered fatal injuries when a load of material shifted and trapped him, police said in a Facebook post. (Robert Short/CBC)

An Ontario man has died in an industrial accident at a fish-feed mill in Truro, N.S, police say.

Emergency workers responded to a report of an incident at Northeast Nutrition on Willow Street on Tuesday evening, Truro police said in a Facebook post.

A 55-year-old man suffered fatal injuries when a load of material shifted and trapped him, the post said.

Truro Police Chief David MacNeil said in an interview Wednesday the man was making a delivery to the facility when the accident happened.

"The gentleman was delivering some material to the plant. There was a dump truck type of an affair and the load shifted in the truck and he was trapped in the load," said MacNeil.

He added that the man was not an employee of Northeast Nutrition.

The Nova Scotia Department of Labour said in an email that since the location of the accident is in a federally regulated work site, the investigation is being led by Employment and Social Development Canada.

Samuelle Carbonneau, a spokesperson for the Department of Employment and Social Development, said in an emailed statement the man was an employee of Double S Agri Transport.

She said an investigation has been launched under Part II of the Canada Labour Code, which covers occupational health and safety. The investigation will "determine the jurisdiction under which the employer falls," among other things, she said.

The man's family in Ontario has been contacted, but police said his name is being withheld while they continue the notification process.