Joint Regional Release - Regions 1 & 6
Monday. March 6, 2000
Contact:
Ted Fitzgerald
(617) 565-2074
Nearly $300,000 in Fines Proposed against Contractor
OSHA CITES LOUISIANA-BASED CONTRACTOR FOR FIVE ALLEGED
WILLFUL SAFETY VIOLATIONS ON NORTHERN MASSACHUSETTS NATURAL GAS
PIPELINE PROJECT
The U.S. Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health
Administration (OSHA) has cited a contractor working on the construction of a
natural gas pipeline in Northern Massachusetts, for five alleged
Willful violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act at
two pipeline installation sites in Methuen, Mass., and has
proposed penalties against the company totaling $290,000.
According to K. Frank Gravitt, OSHA area director for
Middlesex and Essex counties, the alleged violations were
discovered during two safety inspections initiated in August and
October 1999, respectively, at excavations located near Route
213 in Methuen, and chiefly concern employees exposed to
cave-in, crushing and electrocution hazards.
The first inspection was initiated on August 31, 1999, in
response to an employee complaint about excavation safety
hazards and found employees exposed to potential cave-in hazards
from working in an inadequately protected trench box and from
working in unprotected areas of an 8.5-foot deep excavation. The
workers were also exposed to crushing injuries from the
unexpected movement of a side boom tractor or its load. They
also faced the risk of falling from and being struck by moving
pickup and flatbed trucks due to their riding in the backs of
these trucks without benefit of seats and seatbelts.
The second inspection was begun on October 29, 1999, and
resulted from a report that a Caterpillar excavator had made
contact with an energized overhead power line. The inspection
determined that an excavator had indeed struck a power line and
that employees therefore had been exposed to electric shock
hazards due to the contractor's failure to maintain a safe
working distance from the power line and have the line
de-energized, grounded and shielded against accidental contact.
In addition, workers were once again found to be exposed to
cave-in hazards while working in unprotected areas of another
8.5-foot deep excavation.
"While all these citations address hazards that can
cause death or serious injury, the excavation safety citations
are the most disturbing since the contractor was cited last year for
seven similar violations following OSHA inspections of pipeline
installation sites in Rockingham County in New Hampshire,"
said Gravitt, who added that the company had also been
previously cited for violations involving overhead power lines
and riding of unauthorized vehicles.
Noting that Bureau of Labor Statistics figures show that 36
workers died in construction-related cave-ins in 1998, Gravitt
explained that OSHA standards require that any excavation five
feet or more in depth must be protected against cave-ins since
its walls can collapse without warning, cascading tons of soil
and debris onto workers before they have time to react or
escape.
He also reminded employers that a trench box is an accepted
means of protection but only if it is properly designed,
constructed and used, and employees do not work in unprotected
sections of the excavation.
"There's no excuse for these hazards existing in the
first place and even less for their reoccurrence," he said.
"The fact no fatalities or serious injuries occurred here
in no way absolves this employer of the responsibility of
supplying and maintaining these baseline, commonsense -- and
mandated -- safeguards for workers."
As a result, the contractor is being cited for five alleged
Willful violations, the most severe citation OSHA can issue,
with proposed fines totaling $290,000 for: