Confined Space @ TPH

The US Dept of Justice (DOJ) announced last week an agreement with British Petroleum (BP) on three outstanding criminal cases, with monetary penalities totaling more than $370 million.  Included among the settlement were violations of the Clean Air Act associated with the March 2005 explosion at the firm's Texas City refinery, which killed 15 workers and injured 170 others.  BP agreed to pay a $50 million fine---the largest ever assessed under the CAA---for failing to ensure the mechanical integrity of the "blowdown stack," which resulted in the release of hydrocarbon liquid and…
[Updated (10/30/07) below] Representatives from the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and the Chamber of Commerce met this week with White House Office of Management and Budget in a last-ditch effort to influence OSHAâs rule clarifying employersâ obligation to pay for workers' personal protective equipment (e.g., safety goggles, metatarsal boots, gloves). They likely repeated their claims that OSHAâs PPE payment rule is a case of "â¦economic transference, not employee safety and health. â¦employers already pay for the majority of personal protective equipment used in the workplace…
Flight crews from the UK and Australia are warning that engine-oil fumes can contaminate cabin air in certain types of planes. The BBC reports that after two incidents this year in which flight crews experienced problems with fumes, some flight crew members from the Exeter-based Flybe airline are refusing to work on the companyâs British Aerospace 146 fleet (which is generally used on domestic flights). Employees also reported two incidents on Qantas flights (on a 747 and 767); Matthew Benns from the Sydney Morning Herald explains: The problem stems from a cost-cutting design in jet aircraft…
This week, the Salt Lake Tribune is running a must-read series of reports by Loretta Tofani about the human cost of the cheap goods we get from China. Tofani begins with the story of Wei Chaihua, a 44-year-old former farmer who sought factory work in order to give his children education and a better future. Wei didnât know that such a thing as an outdoor gas oven existed until he got a job sanding and polishing steel in a factory that manufactured them, and he didnât know about the disease silicosis until he was diagnosed with it. Wei is hardly an isolated case, Tofani explains: With each new…
Shawn Boone was only 33 years old in 2003 when he was fatally burned from several violent explosions at the Hayes Lemmerz plant in Huntington, Indiana.  The plant manufactured cast aluminum automotive wheels.  These firey blasts, which also severely burned two other workers, were fueled by aluminum dust which had accumulated in the plant.  That same year, chemical dust-fueled explosions at CTA Acoustics in Corbin, Kentucky and at West Pharmaceuticals in Kinston, NC took the lives of 13 workers and injured dozens of others.  The death toll from these workplace disasters compelled…
Secretary of Labor Elaine Chao announced that workplace injury and illness rates for 2006 were the "lowest ever recorded" and noted it was the fourth consecutive year of a rate decline for private sector employers. "The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) report, showing the lowest rates since the Labor Department began collecting data in 1972, confirms that OSHA's consistent emphasis on prevention is paying off with lower on-the-job injuries and illnesses. This report encourages us to continue our balanced strategy of fair and effective enforcement..." Before we allow the Bush Administration…
The demand for coal is going through the roof.  Do giant U.S. energy companies really need a handout? Apparently, the Illinois Department of Commerce and Economic Opporunity thinks so. Yesterday, Governor Rod R. Blagojevich announced the awarding of millions of dollars in economic development aid to some of the biggest coal mining companies in the country.  Illinois is subsidizing the coal mining activities of Murray Energy (owner of the Crandall Canyon mine in Utah), Peabody Energy (self-proclaimed "world's largest private-sector coal company"),  Wilbur Ross' International Coal…
Gold mining is in the news this week after a makeshift gold mine in Colombia collapsed and killed 22. The dead were mostly women, many of them single mothers digging for a few grams of gold that would allow them to feed their families. The Guardianâs Rory Carroll explains, âAn informal agreement with the site's owner allowed them to try their luck over the weekends when the company's earth-movers were inactive.â In South Africa, The Cape Argus reports, hundreds of laborers mining illegally put themselves at serious risk and also endanger official workers, because their haphazard digging…
Just before the House passed legislation last month requiring OSHA to regulate diacetyl, OSHAâs press office went into high gear, announcing the agency was getting to work on just that issue. Two days before the vote, OSHA announced it was initiating rulemaking under section 6(b) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act. In other words, it was finally going to start the process of issuing a standard to protect workers exposed to hazardous flavor chemicals. As part of that process, it announced a stakeholder meeting, scheduled for October 17, 2007. (I'll be attending the meeting, and have…
After reviewing previously undisclosed documents*, the Charleston Gazette's Ken Ward writes how a group of notable occupational health scientists and epidemiologists felt DuPont misrepresented the scientific evidence to-date about the health risks associated with PFOA (ammonium perfluorooctanoate, a.k.a. C8).  Ward writes about concerns expressed in private email exchanges among scientists on the firm's Epidemiology Review Board (ERB), an independent and external committee, when DuPont made a big public announcement (and to its employees at the Washington Works plant (near…
The United Kingdom's Department of Health announced last week that it was providing an additional £97 million ($198 million US) to its National Health Service for programs to protect healthcare workers from violence and abuse.  The Health Secretary noted: "Over 58,000 NHS staff were physically assaulted by patients and relatives in England in 2005-06. This is completely unacceptable. NHS staff working alone and in the community are particularly at risk.   NHS staff dedicate their lives to caring for the sick and in return they deserve respect. Anybody who abuses our staff must face…
Why do people assault those who are trying to help them (or their family members)? Alcohol, drugs, and dementia are among the causes, and the result is that health care workers and social workers face a high risk of on-the-job injury. The Edmonton Journal reports that nearly 20 percent of the Workers Compensation Board of Alberta claims are for violence aimed at health care workers (thanks to Tasha for the link). At The Doctorâs Office online WSJ column, Dr. Benjamin Brewer reports that a study at a large Florida hospital found 74% of the nurses reported being physically assaulted during…
Are the political appointees who run OSHA delusional or merely mendacious? In her column in todayâs Washington Post, Cindy Skrzycki reviews the efforts by members of Congress to require OSHA to issue standards protecting workers from diacetyl, the artificial butter flavor chemical that causes irreversible lung disease. One statement jumped out: "I would characterize us as proactive," said Jonathan Snare, acting solicitor at the Labor Department, which oversees OSHA. The facts show this is simply false. The statement is so ludicrous that it should be an embarrassment even to the political…
What do three women made widows by three fatal Kentucky coal mining accidents have in common with two others left behind in the 2006 airline crash? "I am a widow.  I am a single parent.  I'm an advocate for anyone suffering because they were robbed of their spouse due to ineptitude and/or negligence," said Sarah King Fortney, (here) whose 49 year-old husband C.W. Fortney was killed when Comair flight 5191 crashed after taking-off from the wrong runway at the Lexington, KY airport in August 2006.  Mrs. Fortney was recently honored, along with four other widows, by the Kentucky Justice…
Tammy has posted another edition of the Weekly Toll: Death in the American Workplace at her Weekly Toll blog. It gives short writeups of 134 workplace deaths, including the following: Fernando Jimenez Gonzalez, 18, drowned in a vat of sulfuric acid at the Redwood City, California circuit board manufacturing facility where he worked; he is believed to have fallen into the vat after having been overcome by fumes. Morris W. Moore, an 80-year-old farmer from Humboldt, Tennessee, died from injuries sustained when a tractor fell on him. Dianne Freeman-Green, 47, was shot during an attempted robbery…
Carolynn Dejaynes had visited the tunnel at the Xcel Energy's Cabin Creek hydro-electric plant the day before it claimed her husband's life and that of four other employees of Robison-Prezioso Inc. (RPI).  Mrs. Dejaynes says: "It shouldn't have happened.  There were things that could have been done to prevent it." According to Kirk Mitchell of The Denver Post (here) the new widow has talked with some of the men who survived the tunnel fire and "wants to know exactly what happened to her husband, in part because he took her to see the tunnel the day before the fire and told her it was…
MSHA announces '100 percent' plan From The Onion? No.  MSHA (seriously) just announced "a new initiative to complete 100 percent of mandated regular inspections of all coal mines in the country."  Huh?  A "new initiative" to do something that you are already required by statute to do? Perhaps the Secretary of Labor Chao and Asst. Secretary Richard Stickler are a little irked at Ken Ward of the Charleston Gazette for publishing a number of stories in recent weeks, documenting that MSHA has failed to conduct its required inspections.  Two of the stories (here and here) followed accidents…
Anthony Aguirre, 18, Donald Dejaynes, 43, Gary Foster, 48, Dupree Holt, 37 and James St. Peters, 52 were the five maintenance workers killed on Tuesday afternoon in a tunnel fire at the Xcel hydro-electric plant near Georgetown, Colorado.  If you want any information about the fatal workplace incident, don't bother visiting OSHA's website; you'll find not a word about this workplace disaster.  I've been peeved (as have many others) for MSHA's failure to provide up-to-date and accurate information about mining fatalities and its accident investigation process.  Should we not hold OSHA to…
Nearly 7 years ago, the late Senator Paul Wellstone (D-MN) and Senator Patty Murray (D-WA) began a legislative effort to ban asbestos-containing products.  Yesterday, the "Ban Asbestos in America Act" passed the Senate with a bi-partisan voice vote. On introducing the measure, the bill's author, Senator Murray, said: "When I heard about Americans and people who were dying from absestos, I thought to myself, my gosh, I thought asbestos was banned many years ago.  How can this be?  Well, the fact is asbestos has never been banned [in the U.S.] , today 2,500 metric tons of asbestos are…
Senator Patty Murray (D-Wash) introduced a bill (S. 2127) to see that family members of miners involved in disasters like the 2006 Sago and 2007 Crandall tragedies receive accurate information about the rescue operations and appropriate post-accident support. At a Senate Appropriations' subcommittee hearing on Sept. 5, Senator Murray suggested that she was examining the family-assistance program in place at the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) as a model for mining disasters (See previous post here).  At an October 2 hearing of the Senate HELP Committee, members heard a bit…