United States of
America
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH
REVIEW COMMISSION
1924
Building - Room 2R90, 100 Alabama Street, S.W.
Atlanta,
Georgia 30303-3104
Secretary of Labor, |
|
Complainant |
|
v. |
OSHRC
Docket No.: 17-0637 |
General Dynamics
Land Systems, Inc., |
|
Respondent. |
|
Attorneys
and Law Firms:
Schean Belton, Esquire, U.S. Department of Labor, Office of the
Solicitor, Nashville, TN,
for Complainant
Eric Hobbs, Esquire, Ogletree Deakins Nash Smoak &
Stewart, P.C., for Respondent
JUDGE: Administrative Law Judge Heather A. Joys
DECISION AND ORDER
On October 3, 2016, a warehouse
employee of General Dynamics Land Systems, Inc. (GDL) was seriously injured
when seven crates containing 94-pound struts fell from a stack onto him as he
was inventorying them. There were no
witnesses to the accident and the injured employee has no memory of the
event. Following an inspection by Compliance
Safety and Health Officer (CSHO) William Glasscock of the Birmingham, Alabama,
Area Office of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), the
Secretary concluded the cause of the accident was the instability of the stack
of crates. The Secretary issued GDL a
citation alleging a serious violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.176(b) for failure to
ensure the stack of crates was stable, for which he proposed a penalty of
$9,234. GDL timely contested the
citation bringing the matter before the Occupational Safety and Health Review
Commission pursuant to § 10(c) of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of
1970, 29 U.S.C. § 651- 678 (the Act). GDL
contends the accident was not caused by the instability of the stack, but, by the
injured employee climbing on the stack, causing it to fall.
I held a hearing in this
matter on December 6, 2017, in Birmingham, Alabama. The parties filed post-hearing briefs on February
12, 2018.[1]
For
the reasons discussed below, the citation is vacated.
Jurisdiction
At the hearing, the parties
stipulated jurisdiction of this action is conferred upon the Commission
pursuant to § 10(c) of the Act. The
parties also stipulated at the hearing that at all times relevant to this
action, GDL was an employer engaged in a business affecting interstate commerce
within the meaning of § 3(5) of the Act (Tr. 9-10). Based on the parties’ stipulations and the
facts presented, I find GDL is an employer covered under the Act and the
Commission has jurisdiction over this proceeding.
Background
GDL is a large defense contractor. Among its operations is production of Stryker
vehicles, a family of wheeled military vehicle.
The facility at issue, located near the Anniston Army Depot in Anniston,
Alabama, is a warehouse for Stryker parts.
It is referred to in the record as the Warner Warehouse. At the Warner Warehouse, GDL receives parts in
its receiving department. These parts
are taken to the floor of the warehouse where they are stacked and their
location recorded by the GDL employees assigned to inventory control (Tr. 155). Large parts arrive crated with various
numbers on the crates, including part and serial number (Tr. 186). When parts are ordered, the inventory control
employees pick the parts from the stacks in the warehouse and take them to the
shipping department (Tr. 158).
GDL stores parts at the Warner
Warehouse on shelves and on the floor in stacked crates (Exh. R-11 at p.
8). Due to their size, many of the parts
come individually crated. Large,
individually crated parts are stacked one on top of the other (Exh. R-11 at pp.
1-7). GDL has requirements for these
stacks of crated parts. The crates must
be suitable for stacking (Tr. 36, 161, 232).
Only like parts can be stacked on top of like parts to maintain the same
footprint (Tr. 35, 161, 231-32). Corners
of the stacks must be square (Tr. 35). The
height of a stack cannot exceed 15 feet (Tr. 231). Crates are to be stacked so that they do not
move (Tr. 35-36).
GDL maintains a record of all the
parts at the Warner Warehouse. Employees
assigned to inventory control routinely count and check that record with the
parts stored in the warehouse as part of GDL’s inventory control process. At the beginning of their shifts, employees
are given written lists of the parts they are to check. Some of the assignments are simple counts,
some involve checking serial numbers of each item to be inventoried. Various types of equipment are available for
employees to use when their task requires them to read labels on the top of
stacks or to move the parts to read the labels (Tr. 22, 188). These include order selectors, stackers, forklifts,
and ladders (Tr. 173).[2]
On October 3, 2016, Jason Johnson, Materials
Team Lead and the injured employee’s supervisor, assigned the injured employee
to perform a “cycle count.” (Tr. 186,
214) Johnson provided the injured
employee with a spread sheet containing a list of parts designated by location
and serial number that the injured employee was to count (Tr. 21, 186, 214). The injured employee went to the “upper bulk”
where large parts were located (Tr. 21, 27).
The stack he was to inventory contained struts to the Stryker vehicle individually
housed in wooden crates. A single crated
strut weighs 94 pounds (Tr. 234). Each
crate was labeled with the serial number of the strut (Tr. 216-17). The stack was 10 crates high or 11 feet, 4
inches (Tr. 245). The injured employee
was to read each serial number and check it off his list. The injured employee testified he had
inventoried this stack several times before (Tr. 36).
The injured employee worked
alone. He testified he has no
recollection of any of the events of the day after leaving home for work that
morning (Tr. 21). At some point seven of
the crates containing the struts fell from the top of the stack onto the
injured employee (Tr. 208). He was found
unconscious with the crates on top of him (Tr. 186-87, 207-08). There was no ladder or other equipment in the
area (Tr. 187). No one had witnessed the accident. The injured employee sustained serious
injuries including a broken leg, injuries to his shoulder and face, and
possible head trauma (Tr. 10, 24). He
remained unable to work as of the date of the hearing (Tr. 24).
GDL notified the OSHA Birmingham Area
office of the accident (Tr. 51). CSHO Glasscock
of that office was assigned to and conducted an inspection of GDL’s Warner Warehouse. Beginning October 11, 2016, CSHO Glasscock
performed a walk around inspection of the Warner Warehouse, including the area
in which the accident happened. (Tr. 53-56).[3] CSHO Glasscock interviewed employees who
performed work similar to the injured employee and supervisory employees. He gathered documentation regarding GDL’s
safety and health program (Tr. 60-62; Exhs. C-4, C-5, C-6, and C-7). CSHO Glasscock obtained GDL’s job safety
analysis for material handling and an “EHS” talk titled “Warehouse Operations
Safety” used by GDL (Exhs. C-5 and C-6).
The EHS talk contained a direction to “[b]and or wrap all loose
materials stored over 10 feet.” (Exh.
C-6) CSHO Glasscock noted the strut
crates were not banded together and concluded GDL was not following its own
procedure (Tr. 66). He testified all
four employees he spoke with expressed the opinion the unbanded crates were
unstable (Tr. 60). CSHO Glasscock
conceded he observed no stacks he considered unstable during his inspection
(Tr. 86). He concluded, based upon the
failure of GDL to band crates together and the opinions expressed by the
employees he interviewed, the crates containing struts were not stacked in a
stable manner and recommended GDL be issued a citation for failure to comply
with § 1910.176(b). GDL timely contested
the citation.
The
Citation
Item 1, Citation 1, alleges a
violation of § 1910.176(b). The cited
regulation is part of Subpart N Material
Handling and Storage. It reads
Secure storage. Storage of material shall not create a
hazard. Bags, containers, bundles, etc., stored in tiers shall be stacked,
blocked, interlocked and limited in height so that they are stable and secure
against sliding or collapse.
29
C.F.R. § 1910.176(b). The alleged
violation description states “On or about 10/11/2016 – UB2115, 150 Werner
Drive, Anniston, AL, an employee was struck by crates while performing
inventory count of stored military vehicle parts.” The Secretary alleges the struts were stacked
“at a height and in a manner that was hazardous to employees working in its
warehouse on October 3, 2016.”[4] (Secretary’s Brief at p. 5) The Secretary argues the stack was hazardous
because the stack was “at least 10 feet high” and “not interlocked.” (Secretary’s Brief at p. 5).
Discussion
The Secretary has the burden of
establishing the employer violated the cited standard. To prove a violation of an OSHA standard, the
Secretary must show by a preponderance of the evidence that (1) the cited
standard applies; (2) the employer failed to comply with the terms of the cited
standard; (3) employees had access to the violative condition; and (4) the
cited employer either knew or could have known with the exercise of reasonable
diligence of the violative condition. JPC Group, Inc., 22 BNA OSHC 1859, 1861
(No. 05-1907, 2009).
Applicability
of the Standard
There is no dispute the standard
applies to the cited conditions. The
standard at § 1910.176(b) applies generally to all material in storage. Respondent does not dispute the crated struts
were in storage. Nor is there any
dispute the crated struts were “stored in tiers.” The common definition of a tier is “a layer
of articles arranged one above another.” Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary. The crates were stored one on top of the
other or in tiers (Exhs. C-1, C-2 and C-3).
The standard applies to the stack of crated struts.
Violation
of the Standard
A threshold matter to be resolved is
the Secretary’s burden to establish noncompliance with § 1910.176(b). Neither party squarely addressed this issue.
The hazard addressed in §
1910.176(b) is that posed by the sliding or collapse of material stored in
tiers. Generally, a standard presumes a
hazard and the Secretary need only show the employer violated the terms of the
standard. Kasper Electroplating Corp., 16 BNA OSHC 1517, 1523 (No. 90-2866,
1993). However, a hazard is not presumed
when the standard incorporates the hazard as a violative element. Bunge
Corp v. Secretary of Labor, 638 F.2d 831 (5th Cir. 1981).
A reading of the standard as a whole
leads to the conclusion § 1910.176(b) incorporates the hazard as a violative
element the Secretary must establish in order to show the employer in violation. Although the standard reads as a specific
requirement that stored material be “stacked, blocked, interlocked and limited
in height” those requirements are imposed only so as to ensure stability and
security of the material. In other
words, failure to stack, block, interlock, and limit in height tiered material
only constitutes a violation of the standard where it creates the hazard of
sliding or collapse.[5] It is well recognized that statutes must be
read as a whole, “making every effort not to interpret a provision in a manner
that renders other provisions of the same statute inconsistent, meaningless, or
superfluous.” Lake Cumberland Trust, Inc. v. E.P.A., 954 F.2d 1218, 1222 (6th
Cir 1992), quoting, Boise Cascade Corp.
v. U.S. E.P.A., 942 F2d 1427, 1431-32 (9th Cir. 1991)). The last phrase of the cited standard
incorporates an additional element of the Secretary’s prima facie case, i.e.
establishing the lack of stability and security against sliding or collapse of
the stored material. To interpret the
regulation otherwise would render the final phrase - “so that they are stable
and secure against sliding or collapse” – superfluous. To establish a violation
of § 1910.176(b), the Secretary must show the stack of strut crates was not
stable and secure against sliding or collapse.
The Secretary’s theory of violation
has been a moving target throughout this case.
The alleged violation description references only the fact of the
October 3rd accident as the basis for finding GDL in violation of the
standard. CSHO Glasscock initially
testified he found GDL in violation of the standard because it had not enforced
its own procedure calling for banding of loose materials (Tr. 66). When prompted, CSHO Glasscock suggested the
height of the stack and the weight of the struts contributed to the stack’s
instability (Tr. 94). In his brief, the
Secretary argued because the struts were stored 10 feet high and the crates
were not interlocked they created a hazard. As
proof of this hazard, the Secretary points to the accident.
To the extent the Secretary’s theory
of violation relies on GDL’s failure to band the strut crates, the theory
fails. The plain language of the
standard does not require banding of material.
The standard does require material
stored in tiers be interlocked. The term
“interlock” is not defined in the standard.
Nor has the Commission provided any guidance on interpretation of the
term as used in the standard. The
dictionary definition of the term “interlock” is “to lock together” or “to
connect so the motion or operation of any part is constrained by another.” Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary. As
evidenced in the photographs at Exhibits C-1, C-2, and R-11, nothing about the
manner in which the crates are stored could reasonably be interpreted as being
locked together or connected such that one crate constrains the motion of the
other. Earnest Marquez, GDL’s Section
Manager in charge of the Warner Warehouse testified the crates were stacked one
on top of the other such that if the top of the stack were to “topple over,
[the] whole stack would probably go.”
(Tr. 250) The Secretary
established the crates were not interlocked.
The Secretary has also alleged the stack of crates was not “limited in
height.” The Secretary’s burden is only
met if the height of the stack, the failure to interlock the crates, or both
rendered the stack unstable or not secure against sliding or collapse.
Neither the term “stable” nor
“secure” is defined in the standard. The
common understanding of the term stable is “placed so as to resist forces
tending to cause motion or change.” Webster’s New
Collegiate Dictionary. Secure is used to refer to something “free of
danger” or “affording safety.” Webster’s New
Collegiate Dictionary. To meet
his burden, the Secretary must establish the crates were stacked so that they
would be unable to resist a force tending to cause the stack to move in a manner
that was unsafe or posed a danger. Under
the specific terms of the standard, the movement to be prevented is sliding or
collapse.
This interpretation of the
Secretary’s burden is consistent with the Commission’s long-standing precedent in
Clement Food Company, 11 BNA OSHC
2120 (No. 80-607, 1984).[6] The question in Clement Food was whether a stack of boxes was configured in a
manner that rendered it unstable in violation of § 1910.176(b). The citation had alleged a 15-foot high,
tiered stack of boxes was not interlocked or blocked and the top tier was
leaning. In affirming the alleged
violation, the Administrative Law Judge relied on evidence the center mass of
the stack was “so displaced that any shock or vibration…could cause the top
tier to fall.” Id. On review the employer
argued the stack was not unstable because an outside force was needed to cause
a slip or collapse. The Commission
disagreed the standard required the Secretary to establish material stored in
tiers is inherently unstable. The
Commission held § 1910.176(b) “is not limited by its words to stacks so
unstable that they might collapse of their own weight.” Id.
This interpretation of § 1910.176(b)
was upheld by the Fifth Circuit in an unpublished decision in Sanderson Farms, Inc. v. OSHRC, 348 Fed.
Appx. 53 (5th Cir. 2009). In Sanderson Farms, the Fifth Circuit
upheld the ALJ’s finding[7] of a violation of §
1910.176(b) holding, “although the entire structure was basically stable when
undisturbed, the pallets and boxes became unstable when they were struck or
disturbed.” Id.
The record establishes the stack of
crates that fell on the injured employee was not configured “to resist forces
tending to cause motion or change.”
Although the evidence in this record fails to establish what force acted
on the stack of crates, it is not necessary for the Secretary to make that
showing. It is enough the record
establishes the stack was capable of sliding or collapsing when struck or
disturbed.
GDL’s contention the Secretary must
establish the cause of the accident is rejected. In making this argument, Respondent relies on
Koppers Company, Inc., 1 BNA OSHC 666
(No. 402, 1972) and Buckeye Fabricating
Co., 14 BNA OSHC 2145 (Nos. 90-948 and 90-1013, 1991). Both are unreviewed ALJ decisions with no
precedential value. Both are also
inapposite. In Koppers Company, the ALJ vacated a citation alleging a violation of
§ 1910.176(b) finding the material that had fallen and injured an employee was
not being stored. Therefore, the
standard did not apply. Similarly, in Buckeye Fabricating, the ALJ found the
standard did not apply because the material that had fallen and injured an
employee was not stored in tiers. In
both cases, the actions of the employees preceding the accident were
dispositive of the issue of whether the standard applied. Here, the cause of the sliding of the crates
is not dispositive of whether GDL violated the standard.[8]
The record establishes the stack of
strut crates slid while the injured employee was inventorying its
contents. The crates were not
interlocked such that the force that acted on the stack was capable of causing
it to slide or collapse. It was not
stable and secure within the meaning of the standard. The Secretary has established GDL was in
violation of § 1910.176(b).[9]
Employee
Exposure
To establish exposure, the Secretary
must show that an employee was actually exposed to the cited condition or that
access to the cited condition was reasonably predictable. Phoenix
Roofing Inc., 17 BNA OSHC 1076, 1079 (No. 90-2148, 1995). As evidenced by the accident, the injured
employee was exposed to the hazard of being struck by the strut crates when the
stack slid and fell on him. Other
inventory control employees preforming similar work would likewise be
exposed. The Secretary has met his
burden to establish employee exposure to the cited condition.
Employer
Knowledge
To
establish employer knowledge of a violation the Secretary must show the
employer knew, or with the exercise of reasonable diligence could have known of
a hazardous condition. Dun Par Engineered Form Co., 12 BNA OSHC 1962,
1965-66 (No. 82-928, 1986). To meet his
burden, the Secretary must establish GDL was aware the manner in which the
crates were stacked rendered them unstable.
I find he has not met that burden.
The
stack that fell on the injured employee had been in the same location and
condition since 2014 (Tr. 190). There
was no evidence it had ever shifted or shown any signs of instability in the
past (Tr. 190). The injured employee had
inventoried the stack on three prior occasions (Tr. 36, 190). He testified it had always been stable (Tr.
36). He did not testify he complained
about the condition of the stack on the day of the accident or any other time. CSHO Glasscock testified he observed no
unstable stacks during his inspection.
With the exception of the height, there is no difference between the
manner in which the crates were stacked on the day of the accident and the day
of the inspection. The Secretary
identified nothing in any of the photographic evidence constituting a visible
sign of a hazardous condition.[10] The Secretary failed to establish GDL had
actual knowledge the stack that fell on the injured employee was unstable prior
to the accident.
The Secretary relies on the
testimony of the injured employee that he told Johnson and another supervisor[11] the stacks were “unsafe”
and that “somebody is going to get hurt.” (Tr. 27) The Secretary presented evidence other
employees similarly felt some of the stacks were unstable, but presented no
evidence these employees ever notified supervisory employees of this
concern. Nor is there any documentary
evidence of employee complaints about unstable or unsafe stacks of crates (Tr.
140-41). The record contains no evidence
of any prior accidents involving a collapse or slipping of the stacked crates
(Tr. 102-03, 139, 231).[12] There was no evidence the stacks have been
subject to being struck by any of the various material handling equipment at
the Warner Warehouse. The evidence
presented by the Secretary, that the injured employee told his supervisor about
an unspecified unsafe stack at an unspecified time, is insufficient to
establish management at GDL was put on notice of a hazardous condition
associated with any specific stack of crates or, more importantly, the manner
in which GDL stacked the crates generally.
To
the extent the Secretary attempted to establish GDL had constructive knowledge the
stacks were unstable, his evidence fails to do so. Constructive knowledge is shown where the
Secretary establishes the employer could have known of the cited condition with
the exercise of reasonable diligence. Par Electrical Contractors, Inc., 20 BNA
OSHC 1624, 1627 (No. 99-1520).
Whether an
employer was reasonably diligent involves a consideration of several factors,
including the employer’s obligation to have adequate work rules and training
programs, to adequately supervise employees, to anticipate hazards to which
employees may be exposed, and to take measures to prevent the occurrence of
violations.
Id. citing Precision
Concrete Constr. 19 BNA OSHC 1404, 1407 (No. 99-707,
2001). “Reasonable diligence implies
effort, attention, and action not mere reliance upon the action of
another.” Carlisle Equipment Co. v. Secretary of Labor, 24 F.3d 790, 794 (6th
Cir. 1994). The Commission has held that
“[r]easonable steps to monitor compliance with safety requirements are part of
an effective safety program.” Southwestern Bell Tel. Co., 19 BNA OSHC
1097, 1099 (No. 98-1748, 2000 (citations omitted), aff’d without published opinion, 277 F.3d 1374 (5th Cir. 2001).
As previously noted, the Secretary
posited no explanation as to the force that caused the stack to slide. Although the Secretary need not show the
exact cause of the accident, he must show how GDL could have been aware the
stack was unstable. In other words, the
Secretary must show sliding or collapse of the stacks was a hazard a reasonably
diligent employer would have anticipated under the circumstances. The record as a whole fails to do so.
The injured employee testified when
orders are picked, employees don’t always restack the material in a stable
manner (Tr. 31). The injured employee
testified that reporting unstable stacks to his supervisor was an almost daily
occurrence (Tr. 41). He testified
Johnson would likewise identify unstable stacks to him (Tr. 41). When that happens, he testified Johnson would
require the stack be fixed (Tr. 31).
Johnson testified part of his job was to walk the warehouse to observe
the condition of the stacked material (Tr. 213). He testified he observed unstable stacks
infrequently, but when he did, he had the inventory control employees restack
and stabilize them (Tr. 159). The
injured employee corroborated Johnson always had him fix a stack identified as
unstable (Tr. 42). The Secretary
contends this evidence establishes GDL’s knowledge of the hazardous condition
of the stacks at the Warner Warehouse. I
disagree this is the proper inference to be drawn from this evidence.
GDL has a comprehensive safety and
health program on which its employees are trained (Tr. 134; Exhs. R-8 and
R-10). GDL has standard procedures for
stacking materials. These include
maintaining the same footprint throughout the stack, limiting stacks to 15 feet[13], and ensuring the
condition of the crates are suitable for stacking (Tr. 231-32). The injured employee testified he was aware of
these rules, including a rule that the stack “can’t be moving.” (Tr. 35036).
GDL conducts both internal safety audits and third-party audits (Tr.
135-36). Delbert Hopper, GDL’s
Environmental Health and Safety Representative, testified no auditor has ever
identified the manner in which GDL stacks crates at the Warner Warehouse as
hazardous or otherwise non-compliant (Tr. 138).
Although a storage facility, GDL’s
warehouse is a dynamic environment.
Material is received, moved to storage, ordered, pulled or picked, and
shipped out. It is inevitable the
condition of stacks will change. The
evidence establishes the inventory control process results in frequent
observation of the stacks by employees.
The Secretary contends the process of restacking crates to ensure their
stability was an almost daily occurrence.
The record contains no evidence of prior falls, slips, or collapses of
any stack due to instability.[14] CSHO Glasscock testified he observed no
unstable stacks during his inspection.
Based upon the record as whole, I cannot conclude GDL failed to exercise
reasonable diligence to ensure the stability of the stacked parts at the Warner
Warehouse.
Because the Secretary has failed to
establish GDL knew or with the exercise of reasonable diligence could have
known of the violative conditions of the stacked strut crates, the alleged
violation of § 1910.176(b) is vacated.
FINDINGS
OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
The foregoing decision constitutes
the findings of fact and conclusions of law in accordance with Rule 52(a) of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
ORDER
Based upon the foregoing decision,
it is ORDERED that:
Item 1, Citation 1, alleging a
violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.176(b) is vacated.
SO ORDERED.
/s/
Date: May 4, 2018 HEATHER A. JOYS
Administrative Law Judge
Atlanta, Georgia
[1] To the extent either party failed
to raise any other arguments in its post-hearing brief, such arguments are
deemed abandoned.
[2] The selector, stacker, and
forklift used at the GDL warehouse are depicted in Exhibit R-11, pp. 11, 12,
and 13, respectively (Tr. 173-77).
[3] CSHO Glasscock photographed the
area where the accident occurred and the stack the injured employee had been
counting (see Exhs. C-1, C-2 and C-3).
The parties agree these photographs were not representative of
conditions either immediately preceding or after the accident.
[4] The alleged violation description
refers to conditions on October 11, 2016, the day of the inspection, rather
than October 3, 2016, the day of the accident.
This appears to be error in drafting the citation. The citation describes events of October 3,
2016. Respondent’s defense focuses on
conditions at the warehouse on October 3, 2016.
Both post-hearing briefs refer to the October 3, 2016, events. The citation is hereby amended to reflect October
3, 2016, as the appropriate date of violation.
Based on the evidence presented at hearing and all pleadings, the
parties “squarely recognized” the citation was intended to refer to October 3,
2016. McWilliams Forge Co., 11 BNA OSHC 2128, 2129-30 (No. 80-5868,
1984). I find the parties have tried the
amendment by consent.
[5] In holding the Secretary must show
the failure to stack, block, interlock and limit in height creates a hazard, I
find it is not necessary to reach GDL’s argument regarding whether the word
“and” as it is used in the standard should be read in the conjunctive or
disjunctive. GDL argues to interpret the
word “and” in the conjunctive would result in a finding tiered material
otherwise stable and secure, i.e. posing no hazard, could never be in
compliance unless it meets all four criteria enumerated in the standard. Requiring the Secretary to establish the
existence of the hazard of lack of stability or security against sliding or
collapse of any material stored in tiers eliminates the concern raised by GDL
that interpreting the word “and” in the conjunctive would lead to this absurd
result.
[6] Neither party addressed this
apposite Commission precedent.
[7] The Commission declined review of
the ALJ’s decision and the ALJ’s decision became a final order of the
Commission.
[8] GDL appears to be arguing the only
force capable of causing the stack to slide is one it could not reasonably have
foreseen being applied to the stack. It
seems reasonable the standard was not intended to require employers to ensure
stability against all outside forces no matter how great or unpredictable. I find this is an issue more appropriately
addressed with regard to the Secretary’s burden to establish employer knowledge
of the violative condition.
[9] In so holding, I have placed no
reliance on the testimony of CSHO Glasscock that four employees told him they
believed the stacks were unstable (Tr. 59-60, 81-82). This testimony regarding the opinion of
unnamed employees that certain unidentified stacks of crates were unstable,
without any explanation as to the basis for the opinion is not probative
evidence of a violation.
[10] In both Clement Foods and Sanderson
Farms, cited herein, although the stacked material became unstable only
when an outside force was applied, there were signs the stacks were susceptible
to collapse under such circumstances. In
Clement Foods, the photographic
evidence showed the top tier of the stack was leaning. In Sanderson
Farms, the racks upon which boxes were stacked were “dilapidated and their
legs were often twisted or broken” and
the tiers of boxes were leaning.
[11] There is some dispute in the
record as to whether this second person was a supervisory level employee. It is not necessary to reach that issue.
[12] Jackie Waldron, the Director of
Operations for GDL in Anniston, testified if material had fallen, a report
would be required because, as a defense contractor, GDL would have to make
restitution for any damage (Tr. 102-03).
[13] The Secretary presented no
evidence establishing GDL’s rule allowing stacks up to 15 feet resulted in some
stacks being unstable. Nor did he
present any explanation why the height of the stack that fell, which was less
than 15 feet, was hazardous.
[14] The injured employee testified
about one or two incidents during which a stack fell when hit by a forklift
(Tr. 29). The injured employee could not
provide an approximate date of either occurrence. The Secretary provided no corroborating
evidence of either incident. I give this
testimony very little weight.