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Showing posts with label wikisafeyleaks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wikisafeyleaks. Show all posts

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Family files lawsuit in worker’s trash compactor death



Did a maintenance worker willfully enter a trash compactor, or did he fall in? That’s one question involved with a lawsuit filed by the worker’s children, alleging wrongful death.

Six months ago, we told you the story of John Adams, a maintenance worker at the One Niagara building in Niagara Falls, NY.

He’d been missing since July 4, and the building’s security video finally showed Adams either entering or falling into a trash compactor. His body was never recovered.

Now his family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the building’s owner and several companies that may have had a hand in manufacturing the compactor.

A safety device on the compactor should have prevented Adams from entering while it was running.

A lawyer for his family maintains there was some type of issue with the safety device.

The lawsuit contends the building owners failed to ensure the compactor was working properly and had an operational safety device to prevent employees from being injured.

One Niagara President Tony Farina denies all of the allegations in the lawsuit and calls Adams death “an accident.”

Whether Adams went into the compactor voluntarily or fell in remains a point of contention.

The lawsuit doesn’t name a specific monetary amount.

OSHA is still investigating the incident.

Friday, January 14, 2011

Just Leaked: Industrial accident death




Affton, MO (KSDK) -- The OSHA is investigating a fatal accident at a St. Louis County industrial plant.

The accident occurred Friday morning at Kerry Sweet Ingredients at 8021 New Hampshire around 11 a.m.

Investigators tell NewsChannel 5 a man got stuck between two forklifts. Michael Muessig was rushed to St. John's Mercy Medical Center, where he died that afternoon.

The company said they are shocked and saddened by Muessig's death and that their thoughts and prayers are with his family.

KSDK

Friday, January 7, 2011

OSHA Proposes To Fine MillerCoors $63,500 For Ammonia Leak



The U.S. Department of Occupational Safety and Health Administration has proposed to fine MillerCoors $63,500 for an ammonia leak last July that sent two workers to the hospital.
More than 2,000 pounds of anhydrous ammonia leaked when an ammonia line ruptured at the Coors Brewing plant in Golden on July 12.
The leak occurred in a facility known as the north cellar, where the ammonia is used to cool beer.
OSHA's investigation found that two employees were working on the ammonia system when an uncontrolled release occurred during maintenance operations. The workers escaped serious injury, but were taken to Lutheran Hospital to be treated.


Anhydrous ammonia is a colorless, highly irritating gas. When released at high levels it can cause burning of the eyes, throat and nose; resulting in choking, coughing or death from chemical burns to the lungs or from a swollen throat.
"Employers must be diligent in ensuring that employees and the public are not unwittingly exposed to serious hazards caused by inadequate maintenance of systems controlling highly hazardous chemicals," said John Healy, OSHA’s area office director in Englewood, Colo. “There is no acceptable reason for any employer to require employees to work around such a dangerous chemical without first ensuring they can do so without compromising their safety and health.”
MillerCoors was cited with 10 serious violations accusing the company of failing to follow the proper safety procedures under federal law.
An OSHA violation is serious when there is substantial probability that death or serious physical harm could result from a hazard about which the employer knew or should have known.
MillerCoors has 15 days to comply, request an informal conference with OSHA's area director or contest the findings before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission.

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OSHA News Release