Posts Tagged ‘“willful violation”’

A New Era for OSHA

Included in the budget signed by Congress and the President on November 2, 2015 was an increase in OSHA penalties. This is the first time OSHA penalties have increased in 25 years.

OSHA has yet to issue its interim final rule, clarifying the fine increases; however, it is anticipated that the standard fines will increase approximately 80 percent. Thus, the new fine schedule is anticipated to change as follows:

  • “Serious violations” and “other than serious violations” previously were a maximum fine of $7,000; they are likely to increase to a maximum fine of $12,600.
  • “Willful violations” and “repeat” violations previously were a maximum fine of $70,000; they are likely to increase to a maximum fine of $126,000.

These new fine amounts will go into effect once OSHA issues a final interim rule, confirming the new fine amounts. The rule will go into effect by August 1, 2016, at the latest.

In the meantime, OSHA has continued to vigilantly enforce the standards. This month, a Lancaster County residential homebuilder was cited $64,400 in proposed penalties. The majority of the fines arose from two willful citations. One willful citation for $28,000 arose from three separate uses of forklifts to create a scaffold without proper fall protection. A second willful citation of $28,000 was for employees installing roofing shingles without the proper use of fall protection.

Certain common sense techniques are the best protection from OSHA citations. Emphasize safety by routinely training employees; create a safety program, and hire a safety director, if within the budget; and always prioritize safety on the jobsite. Also ensure that employees are familiar with the most common safety issues and proper protection. In 2015, the top 3 OSHA (construction) standards frequently cited for penalties were as follows:

  1. Fall Protection.
  2. Scaffolding.
  3. Ladders.

When creating a safety program, it is best to rely upon specialized consultants. When resolving or defending OSHA citations, it is best to seek legal advice. Safety has always been a priority for construction companies; now, with the increase in fines, properly handling OSHA citations is too.

What’s Happening Now . . .

       12.3%

  • 2015 Increase in private construction spending.
  • 2015 had private construction spending of $806.1 billion.
  • 2014 had private construction spending of 717.7 billion.

Source: U.S. Census Bureau News, December 2015 Construction at $1,116.6 billion annual rate, US Dept. of Commerce (Feb. 1, 2016).

 

Newsletter written by Jeffrey C. Bright, Esq. , an attorney licensed in Pennsylvania and Maryland. For more information, contact an attorney at Harmon & Davies, P.C.

Employment          Construction           Business

2306 Columbia Ave. | Lancaster, PA 17603

T: 717.291.2236 | www.h-dlaw.com

 

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Earlier this year OSHA fined two construction companies over $115,000 following a crane accident that killed one worker and seriously injured another.  The construction companies were working on a bridge when the decedent was struck by the boom of a crane that overturned.  Another worker was seriously injured when he was ejected from the crane cab.

OSHA fined the construction company in charge of operating the crane $105,000 for one willful violation and five serious violations for allegedly failing to train workers regarding their roles and on ways to use signaling methods.  The company also allegedly failed to attach the crane to the proper barge and failed to implement or meet minimum requirements of a critical lift plan, including designating a lift conductor and organizing lift preparation meetings.

OSHA had inspected the company five times since 2009 and following the latest incident OSHA was placing the company on the Severe Violator Enforcement Program, which focuses on employers with willful, repeat, or failure-to-abate violations.

The other company provided manpower for erecting girders on the project.  It was fined $13,200 for four serious violations including:  failing to develop an effective safety program, faling to conduct competent and qualified trainand failing to comply with crane operating standards.

The construction law attorneys at Harmon & Davies are here to assist contractors with developing effective safety programs and with contesting OSHA citations.  Above all, we care about our construction clients and we can’t emphasize enough how important it is for them to have the proper safety procedures in place to protect their workforce.

This article is authored by attorney Shannon O. Young and is intended for educational purposes and to give you general information and a general understanding of the law only, not to provide specific legal advice. Any particular questions should be directed to your legal counsel or, if you do not have one, please feel free to contact us.

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A Canonsburg, Pennsylvania based painting contractor faces nearly half a million dollars in proposed OSHA penalties for alleged safety violations at three of its projects.  The large citation includes 38 alleged violations, including 14 willful and 11 repeat violations at worksites in Slatington, Harrisburg, and Slatedale, Pennsylvania.

The alleged willful violations include failing to properly protect workers from lead exposure and failing to provide fall protection.  The repeat violations relate to employee exposure to lead above the permissible exposure level, a lack of warning signs posted in lead work areas, failure to ensure workers showered at the end of each shift, and failure to provide medical evaluations and fit tests for respirator users.

Additional alleged violations include:

  1. Failure to notify employees of the results of lead monitoring;
  2. Failure to provide employees with initial medical surveillance for lead;
  3. Failure to provide periodic blood tests for employees exposed to lead;
  4. Allowing workers to have or consume food in an area where lead exposure was above the permissible level;
  5. Failing to notify employees in writing of blood lead test results within five days;
  6. A lack of guarding on electrical wiring to prevent accidental contact; and
  7. Failure to ensure that workers wore respirators while blasting with glass media or when exposed to lead in excess of permissible limits.

 

The cited company has been under OSHA’s scrutiny for the past several years, having been inspected five times in the past five years with four of the inspections resulting in citations for serious violations.  As a result of the painting contractor’s alleged refusal to correct hazards, it has been placed on OSHA’s Severe Violator Enforcement Program, which requires targeted follow-up inspections to ensure compliance with OSHA regulations.

This article is authored by attorney Shannon O. Young and is intended for educational purposes and to give you general information and a general understanding of the law only, not to provide specific legal advice. Any particular questions should be directed to your legal counsel or, if you do not have one, please feel free to contact us.

 

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Why Employers Might Want to Contest “Willful” OSHA Citations

A recent federal court decision in a case referred to as Dayton Tire v. Secretary of Labor, gives employers an even stronger basis from which to contest “Willful” OSHA citations.   Specifically, the recent decision holds that Willful OSHA violations require more than a showing of “mere negligence.”  What this means is that as long as an employer is acting in good faith to comply with OSHA regulations, even if OSHA later determines that the employer’s actions fell short of what was required under OSHA regulations, the employer should not be cited for a Willful violation.

By way of background, OSHA violations are classified as:  Willful, Repeat, Serious, or Other than Serious.  Willful and Repeat violations are the most severe and I usually cringe when clients come to me with Willful and Repeat violations because the fines associated with such violations are substantially greater than the fines associated with Serious or Other than Serious violations and, if the citation sticks, Repeat and Willful violations really put a black mark on the company.  Where the basis for classifying the violation as Willful or Repeat is questionable, Harmon & Davies has frequently counseled our clients to contest the classification of the violation and we have reached favorable results for our clients in terms of having the classification of the violation reduced.

As stated above, the decision in Dayton Tire v. Secretary of Labor gives employers even more grounds upon which to contest a Willful violation.  In challenging a citation, the law says that regardless of the classification of the violation, OSHA must be able to prove that the employer had knowledge of the violative condition.  This standard protects employers from the rouge employee who, despite the employer’s best efforts to create a safe and compliant workplace, violates an OSHA regulation without the employer having any knowledge of it.

Even though the employer’s knowledge of the violation is required for every level of citation, a Willful violation requires that OSHA not only show that the employer had knowledge of the violation, but that an employer committed the violation voluntarily with either an intentional disregard of or plain indifference to OSHA regulations.  To prove that the violation was properly classified as Willful, the Secretary of Labor must show that the employer was actually aware, at the time of the violative act, that the act was unlawful, or that the employer possessed a state of mind that if it were informed that it was violating an OSHA standard, the employer would not care.  In other words, it takes a lot to show that an employer was plainly indifferent.  Accordingly, in the Dayton Tire case, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit held that based upon the Secretary of Labor’s failure to cite to a single piece of evidence indicating that the company’s manager was actually aware that the company’s actions were unlawful, the Secretary of Labor could not prove that the violation was Willful.  Thus, the Court vacated the penalties assessed against the employer.

In so ruling, the DC Circuit court (a federal appellate court) remarked that findings of plain indifference have only been upheld where the evidence shows that a company made no effort to address repeated warnings from employees or OSHA that the company was in violation of safety standards.  The allegations involved in the Dayton Tire case failed to reach that level.  Rather, the evidence in Dayton Tire showed that one of the safety managers made an attempt to respond to safety concerns involving Lockout/Tagout procedures when such concerns were raised.  Although the safety manager might have done more, she did not utterly fail to act.  As such, the safety manager’s responses reflected negligence at most, which evidence is insufficient for a finding of a Willful violation.  Accordingly,under the precedence established in Dayton Tire, so long as employers act in good faith, even if they are wrong, , such employers should not be cited for Willful violations.

If you are an employer who has been issued an OSHA citation, the attorneys at Harmon & Davies are here to assist you with evaluating the merits of your citation and determining whether you should contest the citation.

This article is authored by attorney Shannon O. Young and is intended for educational purposes and to give you general information and a general understanding of the law only, not to provide specific legal advice. Any particular questions should be directed to your legal counsel or, if you do not have one, please feel free to contact us.

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Last month the owner of a Pennsylvania painting company plead guilty to a single misdemeanor count of a “willful violation of an Occupational Safety and Health Administration regulation causing the death of an employee” and was sentenced to a year of probation.  The charge stemmed from the 2010 death of one of the owner’s employees who was sadly electrocuted while using a paint roller at the end of a fiberglass extension pole to reach an upper section of a 30-foot-tall commercial building when the pole came into contact with electrical wires.  Although the owner had warned the employee that the lines were “very dangerous” and to be “extra careful,” he failed to provide any safety related training to the employee and took no steps to protect the employee from the energized lines.  The contractor was cited by federal prosecutors for violating 29 C.F.R. §1926.416(a)(1), which requires employers to prevent workers from laboring close to any part of an electric power circuit unless they are protected against electric shock through insulation of the circuit or de-energizing and grounding of the circuit.

In addition to the criminal charge, OSHA had already fined the contractor $57,400 for one willful and two serious violations stemming from the agency’s investigation into the 2010 death.  May this case serve as a reminder of how important safety related training truly is and how every effort should be made to protect employees from danger.

However, if you ever find yourself in the unfortunate situation of having to contest an OSHA citation, the attorneys at Harmon & Davies, P.C. are here to assist you.

This article is authored by attorney Shannon O. Young and is intended for educational purposes and to give you general information and a general understanding of the law only, not to provide specific legal advice. Any particular questions should be directed to your legal counsel or, if you do not have one, please feel free to contact us.

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