Machinery in our plants comes in all shapes and sizes. Machine
guarding is supposed to prevent workplace injuries. Our industry is not immune to
older machinery that may lack the safe guards that brand new machinery
purchased today would have. Here is a recent story emphasizing the hazard of machinery:
The
death of an employee during the week of August 7, 2016 remains under
investigation.
The
worker died after being caught in an aluminum splitter machine at a metal
processing company in the United States, according to a spokeswoman for the local
Fire Department. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
“At
this time we cannot make any statements while we are in the midst of an
investigation except to state that we are heartbroken at the loss of our friend
and co-worker,” the plant manager said in a statement. “Our thoughts and
prayers go out to his wife and family.”
The
company has no history of safety violations with the U.S. Department of Labor’s
Occupational Safety & Health Administration office, according to the
agency’s local office.
OSHA’s
full investigation of the accident could take as long as six months, OSHA
spokesman said. An aluminum splitter is “some type of rolling machine with some
knives in it,” the OSHA spokesman said.
The Aluminum Plant Safety Blog offers our sincere condolences to the
family, friends, and coworkers of the deceased worker. Our sadness of posting
this story pales in comparison to the paint that they are experiencing and will
experience for a long time. Our hope is that this incident will be printed out
or read by just one plant and will be the reason they look at their own
machinery regarding safety measure to prevent a worker from becoming entrapped.
The APSB does not know the age of the machinery in this incident.
But, from other reports and social media postings we assume that machinery
guarding may be cited as one of the root causes of this incident. Machinery guarding
is an ongoing problem in our industry (as well as other industries). On our
plant tours we commonly observe plant machinery lacking current safety
mechanisms. Plants are under a false safety belief that all is well until an
incident occurs that brings awareness to the hidden danger.
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