Government
safety organizations are given the task to
ensure safe and healthful working conditions for working men and women by
setting and enforcing standards and by providing training, outreach, education
and assistance. Here is a recent story involving the enforcement a government
safety organization did:
The U.S.
Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has
cited an aluminium company for workplace safety and health hazards after a
crane operator was injured in August 2019 at the aluminum manufacturer’s foundry.
The company faces penalties in excess of $150,000 for these violations.
The employee
was hospitalized after a steel plate fell from an uninspected crane onto his
foot. The agency cited the company for one serious and three repeat citations for
failing to report the injury to OSHA within 24 hours of the employee’s
hospitalization; conduct annual crane inspections with written certification;
and failing to balance and secure the load properly.
OSHA placed
the company in the Severe Violator Enforcement Program for repeated
safety failures.
“(Aluminium Company)
continues to disregard their legal responsibility to comply with safety and health
standards,” said local OSHA Area Director. “Employers have an obligation to
provide a safe and healthful workplace for their workers.”
OSHA’s
Cranes and Derricks in Construction standard provides information on required
crane inspections. The agency also provides compliance assistance on reporting
a severe injury.
The company
has 15 business days from receipt of the citations and penalties to comply,
request an informal conference with OSHA’s Area Director, or contest the findings
before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission.
Under the
Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for
providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees. OSHA’s role is to
help ensure these conditions for America’s working men and women by setting and
enforcing standards, and providing training, education, and assistance. For
more information, visit https://www.osha.gov.
The mission
of the Department of Labor is to foster, promote and develop the welfare of the
wage earners, job seekers, and retirees of the United States; improve working
conditions; advance opportunities for profitable employment; and assure
work-related benefits and rights.
We pray that the
injured worker recovers fully from his injuries. In our opinion, and the
aluminium company may disagree we feel from the information provided by OSHA
that the company failed to follow require guidelines. Normally around the globe
companies have the opportunity to file formal objection on any fines. Then
through established guidelines in that country argue against the fines. We
would assume in this situation with the company being designated into the “Severe
Violator Enforcement Program” this company will be forced to pay the fine in it’s
entirely. We will ask the company in 6 months what the end result.
Next, as with
many of the posts the Aluminium Plant Safety Blog editors have toured the
aluminium companies. We were asked to toured this company in the past few years.
We were sad to read in this story the company was cited for Cranes and Derricks
in Construction standard. We specifically brought that topic up during our
tour. Our observation came about when we noticed crane hook attachments that
did not have inspection labels. The concern we had was how the company
segregated the lifting attachments that were in need of repair and the ones
that could function. At that time they could not. As we explained a few years
ago what the hazard was that a worker would unknowingly take a lift attachment
that was broke. We do not know if this issue contributed to the incident listed
in this story or not.
Lastly, we have
noticed that plant management of this company is all relatively new. All of our
previous plant contacts are gone. We pray for the current plant management to
successfully perform their daily jobs in accordance to all government safety
standards. We assume that our observations and reports from a few years ago may
not have been forwarded or even known to current management. Because of this
incident we will reach out to the company this week and see if we can stop by
for a visit.
Please comment.
Update
We just found
the following press release from the aluminium company in this story. We will
comment afterwards.
(Aluminium
company) wholly disagrees with the statements made by (Osha local area
director) on behalf of OSHA’s (local) Area Office. The notion that (aluminium
company) has disregarded its legal responsibility to comply with health and
safety standards is false and misleading.
(Aluminium company) takes its
obligation to provide a safe workplace for our workers very seriously. The
company trains its employees to treat safety as their top priority, and has
implemented safety protocols exceeding industry standards. This is supported by
recent history: 2018 and 2019 were (Aluminium company name’s) safest years on
record, and prior to these most recent citations, the company had been
inspected by OSHA seven times over the course of nearly three years without
OSHA finding any hazards or issuing any citations.
Further, in 2019, (Aluminium Company)
had a total of 13 recordable injuries plant-wide, less than half the average of
28 recordable injuries at facilities sharing (aluminium company name’s) service
and product scope. Far from being out of step with the “safety and health
standards” cited by (local area OSHA director), (aluminium company’s) standards
are outperforming those of its peers.
“OSHA’s statement was
counter-productive and factually misleading,” said (aluminium company) Chief
Executive Officer. "Our commitment to the health and safety goes well
beyond the OSHA requirements. In just the past two years, we instituted
training regimens that outstrip OSHA's standard, added frequent mandatory
safety-focused huddles, and began sponsoring healthy lifestyle initiatives. The
results that we have obtained demonstrate that our methods are working. OSHA’s
rhetoric notwithstanding, these citations—like the citations issued to the
company in early 2017 and still under contest—were improperly issued. We intend
to contest these citations, and look forward to obtaining rulings by the courts
in all pending OSHA matters, which we expect will set the record straight on
the claims made by (local area OSHA director name).”
Please comment.
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