Español
  • Free case evaluation!
  • No fees unless we recover money for you!
Call Us Today
Toll Free: 1-888-474-2352    Local: 619-528-8454

Archive for the ‘OSHA Safety’ Category

JAIL TIME FOR DANGEROUS EMPLOYERS IS REAL FALL PROTECTION

Tuesday, May 24th, 2011

In addition to a successful civil lawsuit,  criminal prosecution of an employer who repeats Osha Safety Violations is a viable way to deter dangerous practices and encourage safety.

In 2008 a California Roofing Company had repeated Osha Violations for dangerous practices and lack of safety equipment.  A worker fell 40 feet to his death onto a concrete side walk. There were no railings, scaffolds, barriers or safety belts available for the worker. The young worker’s large family is left with less than a year’s wages for his death to replace him.

The owner, supervisor and foreman were indicted but claimed a flat roof did not require fall safety protection.  However, they plead guilty to felonies in criminal court. These are knowingly, wilful, violations.  Osha is to be commended for turning these and other cases over to public prosecutors.  Osha provides the investigative work up and testimony.

Aggressive criminal prosecutions for wilful and knowing violations of Osha fall protection will hasten safety practices by employers and contractors in the construction industry. News of this prosecution should be wide spread.  Construction workers will work safe if provided the safety equipment causing injuries and deaths to go down.

FINALLY SOME REAL FALL PROTECTION

Monday, April 18th, 2011

Falls are the number one cause of serious injury and death in building construction.  An average of 40 workers are killed annually as a result of falls from residential roofs.  These deaths are preventable by reasonble fall protection methods.

However, for years subcontractors and general contractors have avoided real fall protection claiming exemption for residential buildings.  No wonder that is a leading cause of construction deaths.  Workers are maimed and die without reasonable fall protection.  Real fall protection saves lives.

An appeals court recently upheld an appeal by roofing subcontractors and general contractors seeking continued exclusion for reasonable fall protection by residential contractors.   The court ruled that residential contractors must comply with OSHA Fall Protection Rules and would not be exempted out.

This is a good positive change and you can expect a drop in serious injuries and fatalities in residential construction from trades working on roofs.  Construction and roofing companies have until June 16, 2011 to comply with the new directive.

FALLS, FORKLIFTS, SCISSOR LIFTS, SCAFFOLDING AND ELECTRICITY

Sunday, December 19th, 2010

AT THE END OF THE DAY, THE GOALS ARE SIMPLE:  SAFETY AND SECURITY.

OSHA’s recent Top Ten list of dangerous work activities included Falls, Scaffolding, and Powered Industrial Trucks. Powered Industrial Trucks would include forklifts and scissorlifts. These operations are dangerous enough by themselves. However, they become geometrically more hazardous when working in close proximity to each other.

During the first week of December 2010 two workers were performing electrical maintenance using a scissor lift and scaffolding. The men were suspended in harnesses at 30 feet.

Another employee was performing unrelated routine work on a forklift. The forklift struck the scissorlift as the men did the electrical work. Both men were knocked unconscious. One man was killed when he fell and was pinned and crushed under the scaffolding. The second worker remain hung in a harness.

The predictable company/employer CYA statement that “[we] are committed to safety and safe work enviornement” belies their actions. The contractor/owner should not have required unrelated hazardous work activities in close proximity. Company rhetoric does not alleviate the preventable suffering and sorrow to the families during this Christmas Holiday. There are no words, only acknowledgement.

Honor these fallen workers by keeping yourself safe at work and taking the extra safety precautions regardless of pressures put on you.

THERE IS NO SAFETY IN NUMBERS.

OSHA’S TERRIBLE TEN

Thursday, October 14th, 2010

This month, October 2010,  OSHA released the Top 10 OSHA Violations by Contractors.  There is a direct correlation between the this list and work related injury activities.  OSHA’s Top 10 Violations for 2010 look a lot like 2009 and 2008.

1. Scaffolding

2. Fall Protection

3. Hazard Communication

4. Respiratory Protection

5. Ladders

6. Lockout/Tagout

7. Electrical Wiring Methods

8. Powered Industrial Trucks

9. Electrical-General

10. Machine Guarding

It is important to keep in mind that these are not ‘employee errors’ or prompted by workers, trial lawyers, or unions.  These are violations by contractors and employers who refuse to conform to OSHA Standards and repeat the same violations over and over again.  Worker related injuries will continue until the cost to contractors is greater than the cost to comply with OSHA Safety Regulations.  Workers’ Compensation benefits are down as are premiums so this is no incentive.  Civil lawsuits, increased monetary penalties and criminal sanctions will increase contractors’ safety for workers.

Safety is the number one concern for the American Worker.  What is the number one conern for the American Contractors based on these figures?

THE ECONOMY AND WORK ACCIDENT STATISTICS

Tuesday, September 28th, 2010

The Department of Labor, Unions, and contractors have recently touted fewer deaths and reduced accidents in the work force as evidence of effective accident prevention.  However, it is misleading and self aggrandizing to attribute these statistics to contractor’s safety awareness.  OSHA accurately reported the reason for the downturn in accidents.

The devil is in the details.

The truth is that the work place has become an even more dangerous place to be in the past 5 years.

Construction projects are down.  Contractors have shut their doors.  The construction industry is down along with the economy.  Home sales are down.  Construction work hours are down.

OSHA documents daily deaths in the work place.  Even with the industry down turn, serious injuries and being in mangled on the job have not slowed according to construction safety magazines.

So, what is this dichotomy of work accidents and deaths declining but reported deaths, accidents, and OSHA Citations still showing an increase?

The number one concern for workers in the United States is not wages.  It is not work hours or even benefits.

THE NUMBER ONE CONCERN for American Workers is safety.

Why is their concern safety if work deaths and accidents are down significantly?  Aren’t American Workers getting what they wanted in reduced accidents and a safer work place?  No.  Workers continue to be concerned about work safety because they know that it is not getting safer but more dangerous in the work place.

Work accidents and deaths are down because man hours are down with this recession.  As a percentage of work hours, work accidents have increased.  Economists and business statisticians tell us that in a recession when workers are laid off, businesses become more efficient and production increases.  This may be true in some instances but what is clear is that in a recession the first thing to go is safety programs and safety concerns.  The work place becomes more dangerous.

Do not let your eagerness to work and earn blind you to safety.  Safety is and should continue to be your NUMBER ONE concern.

OSHA Safety Training Now Mandatory In Some States

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

Seven states now have laws that require construction workers to complete the OSHA 10-hour construction safety course before they can work on certain construction projects.  The states with an OSHA law in effect are Massachusetts, Connecticut, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, New York, Missouri and effective January 1, 2010, Nevada. Of these states, only Nevada will require construction workers to complete the OSHA course before working on any construction.  The other states only require OSHA training on publicly funded projects. The OSHA 10-hour construction safety course was developed by the federal Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) as a voluntary safety course to teach workers about the hazards of construction work and the regulations that apply to worksites.  The OSHA 10-hour course can only be taught by instructors who are authorized by OSHA to conduct this training. Some large construction companies have their own authorized OSHA trainer on staff. There are also private safety consultants that conduct this training for a fee to companies or group.