US Department of Labor investigation finds Birmingham construction company willfully exposed workers to trench collapse at Bessemer worksite

US Department of Labor investigation finds Birmingham construction company willfully exposed workers to trench collapse at Bessemer worksite BIRMINGHAM – A U.S. Department of Labor investigation has found numerous safety hazards at a civil construction employer’s worksite following a trench collapse in Jefferson County. The department’sOccupational Safety and Health Administration investigators found CB&A Construction LLC workers removed and installed drain pipes for Jefferson County under a suspended load, without hard hats, and at the edge of an excavation that lacked protective restraints.OSHA cited CB&A Construction with a willful violation and proposed $170,145 in penalties.CB&A Construction LLC has 15 business days from receipt of its citations and penalties to comply, request an informal conference with OSHA’s area director, or contest the findings before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission. Penalties and citations may...

US Department of Labor Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council Apprentice and Training Program sign alliance to train employees on hazards

US Department of Labor, Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council Apprentice and Training Program sign alliance to train employees on hazards
Who:               U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration St. Louis Area Office and Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council Apprentice and Training Program-St. Louis Campus What:             Workplace safety and health alliance Background: The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council Apprentice and Training Center Program-St. Louis Campus signed an alliance, June 14, 2023, to provide valuable safety training to apprentices, members, industry professionals, and OSHA in recognition and prevention of workplace hazards in the residential, commercial and industrial construction sectors. The two-year alliance will focus on reducing and preventing exposure to a variety of construction safety and health hazards through the development and delivery of training and education programs by the council.  Training will focus on the construction industry’s deadly four hazards: falls, electrical, struck-by and caught-in-between and heat illness prevention, among other topics. Participants will also share information on OSHA campaigns, including the National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls in Construction, Heat Illness Prevention, Preventing Suicides in Construction, and the Safe + Sound Campaign to encourage every workplace to have a safety and health program. The OSHA Alliance Program enables organizations to enter voluntarily into a cooperative relationship to raise awareness of OSHA’s initiatives, outreach, communications, training and education. Quote: “Working together to recognize hazards and follow industry best practice safety protocols results in safer worksites,” said OSHA St. Louis Area Office Director Bill McDonald. “Aligning with the Mid-America Carpenters Regional Council Apprentice and Training Center Program gives us an excellent opportunity to help employers and workers identify and eliminate the most common and dangerous hazards construction industry workers face.” Learn more about OSHA.  

Published at June 20, 2023 at 05:00PM
Read more at https://dol.gov

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Settlement affirms willful OSHA violations, $215K penalties, against contractors for fall hazards at multiple New Jersey work sites

St. Louis contractor faces $258K in fines after exposing roofing workers to potentially deadly fall hazards 5 times in 7 weeks at Wentzville worksites

Department of Labor encourages construction industry employers, stakeholders to join 2024 National Safety Stand-Down to Prevent Falls