US Department of Labor recovers $138K in back wages, damages for 27 construction workers denied overtime in Colorado Springs

US Department of Labor recovers $138K in back wages, damages for 27 construction workers denied overtime in Colorado Springs Employer:                             Bulletproof Plumbing & Heating Inc. Investigation site:             6920 Ropers Point                                                      Colorado Springs, CO 80908Findings:                                The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division found Bulletproof Plumbing & Heating Inc. paid 27 non-exempt plumbers straight time for hours over 40 in a workweek, when time and one-half was required by federal law. Back wages recovered:        $69,050 in back wages for 27 employeesDamages recovered:              $69,050 in liquidated damages for 27 employeesQuote: “Construction workers often work long hours doing hard, strenuous jobs and they have the right to be paid the overtime they earn and are owed,” said Wage and Hour District Director David Skinner in Denver. “The Department of Labor is determined to

Worker’s fatal fall in Chenango County preventable if Tennessee-based contractor had provided employees fall protection equipment, training

Worker’s fatal fall in Chenango County preventable if Tennessee-based contractor had provided employees fall protection equipment, training
SYRACUSE, NY – A construction contractor could have prevented an employee’s fatal fall at a Smyrna, New York job site in December 2023 by providing adequate fall protection and training employees in its effective use, a U.S. Department of Labor investigation found.Inspectors with the department’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration found A.W. Stiles Contractors Inc. of McMinnville, Tennessee, failed to provide the worker who was fatally injured and three other employees with effective fall protection, exposing them to falls of 23 feet as they replaced an aluminum standing seam roof on a building at Baillie Lumber Co. OSHA also determined the company neglected to ensure its employees were trained on fall hazards, in the use of personal fall arrest systems and on the correct procedures for installing, maintaining and inspecting the fall protection systems on site. In addition, A.W. Stiles designed, installed and used fall protection systems at the Smyrna worksite without the supervision of a qualified person, in violation of OSHA requirements. The limited fall protection systems in place were neither installed nor used correctly. Inspectors also found A.W. Stiles did not evaluate respiratory hazards for employees using respirators and failed to ensure workers were medically able to use respirators. These conditions resulted in OSHA citing the company for eight serious violations, with a total of $83,885 in proposed penalties. “Falls are the leading cause of construction industry deaths and yet this company chose to ignore federal standards and exposed four employees — including the deceased — to this deadly hazard,” said OSHA Area Director Jeffrey Prebish in Syracuse, New York. “This led OSHA to cite and fine A.W. Stiles for the lack of fall protection on an instance-by-instance basis – one citation for each of the four exposed workers.”View the citations OSHA issued to A.W. Stiles Contractors Inc. “As is often the case in workplace falls from elevations, this tragedy could have been prevented had A.W. Stiles Contractors Inc. followed and maintained basic, commonsense and legally required safeguards. Employers must commit to providing and using effective fall protection systems and equipment, and training workers in their use,” added Prebish.The Bureau of Labor Statistics reported 395 people died in workplace falls from elevation in 2022.A.W. Stiles Contractors Inc. provides building, repairs, parts and services for the lumber industry. The company 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.Learn more about OSHA and its national emphasis program to prevent workplace falls.OSHA’s stop falls website offers safety information and video presentations in English and Spanish to teach workers about fall hazards and proper safety procedures. The agency also offers compliance assistance resources on Protecting Roofing Workers and recommendations for developing a safety and health program.

Published at June 25, 2024 at 05:00AM
Read more at https://dol.gov

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