Roofing contractor sued by DOL for nonpayment of $360k in fines
The US Department of Labor has taken strong legal action against a roofing contractor, underlining a significant issue within the construction industry – the lack of proper safety measures for employees working on roofs. The contractor has faced repeated citations and penalties totaling over $360,000 due to their failure to ensure employee safety while working at heights.
Despite being cited a total of nine times since 2014, the company consistently failed to provide essential safety equipment and measures to protect workers from fall hazards greater than six feet. This persistent disregard for safety led the Department of Labor (DOL) to pursue legal measures against the contractor in a Chicago court.
In 2022, while working on roofs in Illinois and Wisconsin, OSHA found that the contractor didn’t protect workers from falls by requiring the use of guardrails, safety nets, or personal fall arrest systems as required in 29 CFR 1926.501. The contractor received multiple serious, willful, and repeat citations, highlighting the gravity of the situation. The initial penalties were $226,530 for the Illinois violations and $134,001 for the Wisconsin violations – but the company contested these violations.
Once a citation or a penalty issued by OSHA is contested by an employer, the case must go through the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (OSHRC). OSHRC is an independent Federal agency that provides a fair and impartial process for reviewing and making judgments on disputes related to citations, penalties, and other enforcement actions issued by OSHA. An administrative law judge (ALJ) makes the final determination.
The contested case went through OSHRC, and an ALJ upheld OSHA’s citations and penalties. However, the contractor still refused to pay the court-ordered penalties and is now being sued by DOL.
Christine Heri, the Regional Solicitor of Labor in Chicago, explained, “The Department of Labor is doing this to make [the owner and contract company] follow the law. They need to pay more than $360,000 in fines as ordered by the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission. The law says that employers have to follow safety rules to protect their workers.”
Employees facing exposure to fall hazards continue to be the top OSHA violation year after year. They are also the number one cause of deadly accidents in the construction industry. Falls account for hundreds of deaths each year and thousands of severe injuries. In 2021, almost 20% of workplace deaths happened in construction. More than a third of these deaths were because of falls, trips, or slips. Most of these were falls from a higher place to a lower one. Construction accounted for almost half of all deadly falls, trips, and slips in 2021, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics.
On August 23, 2023, the DOL requested a judgment against the employer for the sum of the penalties owed, $360,531, with post-judgment interest and costs as allowed by the courts.
Key to remember: Failure to comply with the standards or to protect workers can lead to significant fines, and OSHRC will not hesitate to uphold legitimate citations and penalties. OSHA and the DOL can and will follow through on ensuring violations are corrected and the fines are paid.