United States of America
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
1120 20th Street, N.W., Ninth Floor
Washington, DC 20036-3457
:
SECRETARY OF LABOR, :
Complainant, :
:
v. :
:
HERCULES, INC. : OSHRC Docket No. 93-2790
:
And :
:
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ALLIANT TECHSYSTEMS, INC. , :
Respondents. :
:
UNITED STEELWORKERS OF AMERICA, :
Authorized Employee Representative. :
____________________________________________ :
DECISION
Before: RAILTON, Chairman; STEPHENS and ROGERS, Commissioners.
BY THE COMMISSION:
Hercules manufactures explosives at a facility in Kenvil, New Jersey. Before the
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Commission for review is a failure to abate notification alleging that Hercules failed to
1
Subsequent to the commencement of the hearing in October 1994, Alliant Techsystems, Inc.
purchased part of Hercules’ business, taking over operations at the Hercules facility in
question. Upon motion by the Secretary, Alliant was added as a party to this case.
2
This case originally included several notifications for failure to abate various recordkeeping
2004 OSHRC No. 4
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abate previously-cited violations of 29 U.S.C. § 654(a)(1) , section 5(a)(1) of the
Occupational Safety and Health Act, 29 U.S.C. §§ 651-678 (“the Act”), for failure to protect
employees from the effects of explosions. The earlier citations were issued following an
inspection of an accident involving explosive material at the Kenvil facility that occurred in
June of 1989. That accident destroyed several buildings and caused non-fatal injuries to a
number of employees. The citations alleged, among other things, that Hercules violated
section 5(a)(1) by exposing its employees to hazards associated with four explosive
manufacturing operations.
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Hercules and the Secretary settled these two citation items on October 21, 1991. As
violations. The judge severed one of those notifications and issued a separate decision, which
is currently before us on review in Docket No. 95-1483. The judge retained the remaining
recordkeeping failure to abate allegation in this docket number. The judge’s disposition of
that item is also before us on review. Because the two recordkeeping notifications involve
similar facts and issues, and because the notification for failure to abate the Section 5(a)(1)
violations, the Act’s general duty clause, involves totally unrelated facts, we sever the
recordkeeping portion of this docket number and consolidate it with the recordkeeping
notification in Docket No. 95-1483. A copy of the judge’s decision as it relates to the failure
to abate the Section 5(a)(1) violations is attached.
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Section 17(d) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 666(d) states that:
Any employer who fails to correct a violation for which a citation has been
issued under section 9(a) within the period permitted for its correction (which
period shall not begin to run until the date of the final order of the Commission
in the case of any review proceeding under section 10 initiated by the
employer in good faith and not solely for delay or avoidance of penalties), may
be assessed a civil penalty of not more than $7,000 for each day during which
such failure or violation continues.
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Section 5(a)(1) states that each employer:
shall furnish to each of his employees employment and a place of employment
which are free from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause
death or serious physical harm to his employees.
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The settlement agreement became a final order of the Commission on December 23, 1991.
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part of the settlement, Hercules withdrew its notice of contest to the two general duty clause
charges and was assessed a reduced penalty. It agreed to abate the cited hazards by
December 5, 1991. On February 20, 1992, in accordance with the terms of the settlement
agreement, Hercules notified the Secretary that the cited hazards had been abated. On March
9, 1993, the Secretary inspected the facility regarding an unrelated matter and thereafter
issued the notification of failure to abate (NFTA) now before us. The notification alleged that
these violations remained unabated from December 23, 1991 to March 9, 1993, or 440 days.
The Secretary proposed the maximum penalty of $7000 per day for a total proposed penalty
of $3,080,000. The notification alleged that neither of the general duty clause violations
cited in 1989 had been abated with regard to the Blender Packer operation, one of the four
operations originally cited. The gravamen of the charge in the original citation as it relates to
the NFTA was that, in the event of a detonation in the Blender Packer Operations building,
employees would be exposed to death or serious physical harm from the effects of the blast
in two areas. The first area involved employee access to a loop road near the building where,
in the event of a blast, employees would be exposed to overpressures of 2.3 pounds per
square inch (p.s.i.). The second area concerned employees in the Blender Packer Control
building, from which the functions of the operations building were remotely controlled. The
failure to abate notice alleged that employees remained exposed in both areas to
overpressures in excess of 2.3 p.s.i. and, in the Blender Packer Control building, to flying
debris that might be caused by another explosion.
After a lengthy hearing, Judge DeBenedetto issued a decision vacating the failure to
abate notification. He carefully analyzed the testimony and computer software programs of
expert witnesses produced by each party. He determined that the program developed by the
expert for Hercules more accurately predicted the blast effects that would be expected in the
event of an explosion. He found that Hercules’ expert’s program was more sophisticated and
credible in light of the situation to be expected in the event of an explosion. Specifically, the
judge agreed with the analysis presented by Hercules’ expert, that an explosion originating
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inside the Blender Packer Operations building would be measurably suppressed by its
surrounding structure and its three to five foot thick earth covering. Hercules hardened the
front wall of the control building after the 1989 accident. The judge agreed that the earth
covering would suppress the explosion sufficiently to drive the blast wave out of the
uncovered portals at each end of the operations building in a direction away from where the
control building and the loop road were located. The judge agreed with Hercules’ expert
that rather than punching holes through the control building as the Secretary’s expert had
contended, the blast wave would envelope it like a glove, creating an overall crushing effect
upon its earth covering. However, the control building’s location, its hardened door, and the
earth covering would succeed in keeping overpressure levels inside the control building at no
more than .01 p.s.i., just slightly above ambient pressure and materially reduce any hazard of
flying objects.
The judge also agreed with the conclusion of Hercules’ expert that overpressure levels
at the loop road associated with the detonation of 2,000 pounds of explosive material, a limit
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which was strictly enforced after the 1989 event, would remain well below 2.3 p.s.i.
We have considered the record, the arguments of the parties and the applicable case
law. We discern no material error in Judge DeBenedetto’s evaluation of the computer
software and the testimony of the expert witnesses and find that his decision vacating the
notification is otherwise supported by the evidence and applicable legal precedent. Fabi
Construction Company, Inc., OSHRC Docket No. 96-0097 (May 30, 2003). That part of his
decision is affirmed and is attached to our decision.
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The amount of explosive material processed at the time of the 1989 explosion was of the
order of 4000 pounds. Hercules took steps after the explosion to ensure that the amount
processed did not exceed the 2000-pound level. It took additional steps to lower the
possibility of an explosion, and it took steps to prevent employee access to the loop road
while materials were being processed in the Blender Packer Operations building.
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Accordingly, it is ORDERED that the Notification for failure to abate the violations of
the general duty clause is vacated.
_/s/________________________
W. Scott Railton
Chairman
_/s/_______________________
James M. Stephens
Commissioner
_/s/________________________
Thomasina V. Rogers
Commissioner
Dated: February 27, 2004
ATTACHMENT