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St. Marys Foundry Cited for Workplace Safety and Health Violations

The U.S. Labor Department's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has cited St. Marys Foundry Inc. St. Marys, Ohio, and proposed penalties totaling $253,350 for 31 alleged serious violations, three willful violations and two other-than-serious violations of federal workplace safety and health standards.

OSHA initiated the current safety and health inspections on June 28, 2006, as a result of the company being placed on the agency's site specific target inspection list due to St. Marys Foundry's high injury rates and as a result of the state of Ohio's Primary Metals Industry Local Emphasis Program.

The willful citations, with a proposed penalty of $168,000, were issued against St. Marys Foundry for failing to ensure employees wore respiratory protection, thus exposing them to silica dust at up to 2,109 percent of the OSHA permissible exposure limits, not enforcing the required hearing protection program, and for allowing workers to use higher than the allowable compressed air pressure.

Serious citations, with a proposed penalty of $84,350, were issued for lack of personal protective equipment, lack of a medical surveillance program, lack of proper guardrails around casting pits, casting and molds, and for other violations. Two other-than-serious citations with a proposed penalty of $1,000 were issued for not labeling permit-required confined spaces and failing to record silicosis cases on the "OSHA 300" log, which is used to record work-related injuries and illnesses. Read more at osha.gov

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  Did You Know?
 

Compared To Other Industries, Construction Tends To Be More Dangerous.

The rate of injury for workers in the construction industry is approximately 60 percent higher than the overall average for all workers.  Recognizing that hazards exist and planning ahead to properly control or eliminate them, helps protect the working men and women of the construction industry and saves businesses time and money.

Construction has the third highest rate of death by injury.

The death rate in the construction industry is about 15.2 deaths per 100,000 workers.  The leading causes of death among construction workers are falls from elevation, motor vehicle crashes, electrocution, machines, and stuck by falling objects.  The only two industries that have a higher death rate include mining and agriculture.


 


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