$1.3M OSHA fine calls attention to worker safety training
In February, two workers died after a dump truck struck and pushed them into a nine-foot deep trench. OSHA investigated and now says, given the severity and nature of the recent hazards, as well as the company and its predecessor’s history of violations, OSHA is compelled to use its egregious citation policy.
This allows the agency to propose a separate penalty for each instance of a violation. Because the employer had six untrained workers, OSHA multiplied the $136K fine by six, for a total of just under $820K. In the end, the agency cited the Massachusetts trenching, excavation, and underground construction contractor for 28 willful, repeat, serious, and other-than-serious violations with a grand total of $1.3M in proposed penalties.
The training provision that made up the lion’s share of the total fine is found at 29 CFR 1926.21(b)(1) and calls for all construction employers to instruct employees in the recognition and avoidance of unsafe conditions. The agency says all six workers were not trained to recognize hazards associated with roadway work and excavations, including struck-bys. “When you fail to train your employees properly, you deny them the most valuable tool they can have, knowledge ... to do their work correctly and safely,” said one OSHA representative.