Region 3 News Release: USDL: III-00-01-27-005-WVA
Thurs., Jan. 27, 2000
Contact: Kate Dugan
PHONE: Office: (215) 596-1147 / After Hours: (610) 522-9484
CHARLESTON EMPLOYER CITED FOR SAFETY AND HEALTH VIOLATIONS AFTER
FATAL TRENCH COLLAPSE
The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health
Administration has cited Valley Development of West Virginia, Inc.,
Charleston, W.Va., for alleged violations of safety and health standards
and proposed $39,200 in penalties following a fatal trench collapse in
Sept. 1999. The company was installing a sewage system in Washington,
W.Va., when the accident occurred.
According to Stanley H. Elliott, area director of the Charleston OSHA
office, the company was cited for one willful violation, with a proposed
penalty of $28,000, for not inspecting the trench or surrounding areas to
ensure that employees were not exposed to hazards of a cave-in.
"This employer was well aware of the OSHA requirements for
inspections of trenches by a competent person and put an untrained
employee in charge of the work," said Elliott.
The serious violations, with a proposed penalty of $11,200, concern the
lack of employee protection in a trench; not instructing employees on how
to recognize hazards while working in trenches; piling excavated material
too close to the edge of a trench; employees were not provided with a safe
means of exit from an 8 foot deep trench. The other-than-serious violation
was for lack of a lockout program to ensure that equipment being serviced
would not inadvertently start up and present a hazard to the employees.
OSHA has implemented a regional public awareness program called
"Dig Trenches, Not Graves" which alerts employers and employees
alike to the hazards of working in and around trenches.
Willful violations are those committed with an intentional disregard
of, or plain indifference to, the requirements of the OSHA act. A serious
violations is defined as one in which there is a substantial probability
that death or serious physical harm could result, and the employer knew or
should have known of the hazard.
The company has 15 working days to contest the citations and proposed
penalties before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission.
The investigation was conducted by the Charleston OSHA office, Suite
407, 405 Capitol St., Charleston, W.Va. 25301, telephone (304) 347-5937.