Government safety organizations are tasked with assuring “safe and healthful working conditions for working men and
women by setting and enforcing standards and by providing training, outreach,
education and assistance.” The Aluminium Plant Safety Blog follows two government
safety organizations; OSHA in the USA and the H&SE in the United Kingdom.
Both organizations have done a great job in recent years in producing safety
information that is both educational and informative. In the past government
organizations primarily produced the rules. Now a days in addition to the
producing the rules these two organizations (and many others) have developed
all sorts of educational literature that are great. Nevertheless, many in our
industry have an adversarial relationship with government safety organizations.
Here is a story from earlier in 2015 highlighting the enforcement side of
government safety organizations:
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has proposed
fines totaling of more than 52,000 € for safety and health violations at the aluminium
extrusion manufacturing facility in in the Midwest United States.
An investigation in late 2014 found safety and health violations
at the plant, including a sander and multipurpose press in the fabrication area
that lacked proper safety mechanisms, exposing workers to amputation and other
serious hazards, OSHA said in a statement announcing the proposed penalties.
The same plant was cited for a similar violation in 2013, according to OSHA,
which is part of the United States Department of Labor.
Other violations found in the 2014 investigation included
electrical hazards and unsecured shelving and storage units, OSHA said.
“Lack of worker protections at this facility exposed workers to
serious and life-altering injuries,” the OSHA’s area director said in the
statement. “The extrusion company has a responsibility to protect workers from
known hazards at its jobsite, and the number of violations there demonstrates a
lack of commitment to that obligation.”
An extrusion company representative said the company will be
meeting with OSHA next week to discuss the matter.
"We disagree with OSHA’s characterization of the alleged
hazards described in the release, and in particular, that we have exposed our
workers to amputation hazards," the company said in a release. "We will
vigorously defend itself against these claims. The health and safety of our
employees remains our top priority and we look forward to working with OSHA to
that end."
The Aluminium Plant Safety Blog chose not to name the extrusion
company because they have the right to argue against the fines. Regardless, all
of the items cited above have been listed previously in incidents on this blog.
It appears that a common citation for aluminium extrusion companies
is “proper safety mechanisms” on extrusion presses. Is that because extrusion
presses are designed poorly. No they are not designed poorly. In our opinion
what has occurred is common to older equipment. Simply older equipment does not
have current safety mechanisms on it. Unless it was retrofitted. There are many
examples in the extrusion industry where presses and other equipment have been
retrofitted with the latest safety mechanisms. The Aluminium Times Magazine had
an article about this same topic.
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