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Fatal fall investigation results in proposed $112,000 fine for lumber mill

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Fatal fall investigation results in proposed $112,000 fine for lumber mill

An Aberdeen, Washington, lumber mill is facing a $112,000 fine for safety violations following the death of a worker last April, the Washington State Department of Labor & Industries announced Wednesday.

Andrew Ward, 41, died when he fell from an elevated platform where he was working to the concrete surface below. An investigation by the Department of Labor & Industries found Anderson, California-based Sierra Pacific Industries guilty of seven safety violations at the lumber mill where the incident happened, the department announced. 

The investigation found that a section of permanent yellow guardrail was removed from the 17.5 foot platform and replaced with yellow caution tape so that a crane could move some equipment. When Ward went to the edge of the platform to communicate with the crane operator below, he leaned forward and fell, according to investigators. 

The investigation found that Sierra Pacific Industries knew that caution tape cannot be used in place of guardrails at a high elevation, but still regularly allowed it to happen. Sierra was also required to provide workers with a fall protection system, such as a harness, lanyard and tie-off point, while working on the elevated platform without adequate guardrails, and when removing them, according to the department.

As a result, Sierra Pacific was cited for a willful violation, the most serious, with the maximum penalty of $70,000 for not ensuring that an open-sided work platform was adequately guarded and for not ensuring employees wore fall protection equipment, the department announced.

“A death like this is especially tragic because it was completely preventable by using proper fall protection and following safe work practices,” said Anne Soiza, the department’s assistant director for the Division of Occupational Safety and Health, said in a press statement. “Falls are the leading cause of worker deaths and immediate hospitalizations. Employers need to be vigilant about preventing falls.”

The employer was also cited for an additional six serious violations, each with the maximum penalty of $7,000. Those violations covered a range of serious hazards that exposed workers to harm, including ineffective safety and health training; a safety program that wasn’t tailored to company operations; inadequate personal protective equipment training; untrained crane personnel; and not following safety precautions required for open flame work, according to the department.

Because of the willful violation that led to the death of a worker, Sierra Pacific Industries has been placed on the severe violator list and will be subject to follow-up inspections to determine if the conditions still exist in the future.

Sierra has appealed the violations. A spokeswoman did not return requests for comment.  

 

 

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