Region 3 News Release: USDL: III-00-03-15-020-PA
Wed., Mar. 15, 2000
Contact: Leni Uddyback
PHONE: OFFICE: (215) 861-5102
OSHA CITES COMPANY FOR ALLEGED SAFETY AND
HEALTH VIOLATIONS; CITES UNSAFE TRENCH
The U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health
Administration today cited a company
for alleged safety and health violations, and proposed a total
of $130,650 in penalties. Samaras is a sewer line construction
company located in Monaca, Pa. employing approximately 10
workers.
The investigation was initiated on October 1, 1999 in
response to a complaint of unsafe working conditions made when
the company was installing approximately three miles of sewer
lines for the Town of Cherry Hill, Pa. It was alleged that
employees were working in unsloped excavations between 10 and 12
feet deep.
According to Robert Szymanski, area director for the
Pittsburgh OSHA office, citations were issued for three willful
violations, with a proposed penalty of $117,000, one serious
violation with a proposed penalty of $1,750; two repeat
violations with a proposed penalty of $11,900; and two
other-than serious violations, which carry no penalty.
The willful violations allege that the company failed
to provide proper cave-in protection and failed to keep
excavated materials at least two feet from the edge of the
trench. The serious violation relates to the company's
use of defective trenching equipment.
The repeat violations include failure to wear
protective helmets and failure to provide workers with an exit
from the excavation. The other-than-serious violations
relate to the company's use of a defective ladder and its lack
of manufacturer's data for the excavation equipment.
"The OSHA standards blatantly ignored by the contractor are critical to worker protection on
excavation projects," says Symanski, "By shoring or
sloping a trench, a company drastically reduces the chance of an
accident on the job."
OSHA is making an effort to raise awareness of the dangers of
unprotected trenches in its "Dig Trenches, Not Graves"
media campaign in Pennsylvania and throughout the rest of the
region.
Willful violations are those committed with an
intentional disregard of, or plain indifference to, the
requirements of the Occupational Safety and Health Act and OSHA
regulations. A serious violation includes a substantial
probability that death or serious physical harm could result,
and that the employer knew or should have known of the hazard.
The firm has 15 working days from receipt of the citations to
either decide to comply, request an informal conference with the
OSHA area director, or to contest the citations and proposed
penalties before the independent Occupations Safety and Heath
Review Commission.
This inspection was conducted by the Pittsburgh Area Office,
Federal Building-Room 1428, 1000 Liberty Avenue, Pittsburgh,
Pa., (412) 395-4903.