SECRETARY OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC Docket NOS. 98-1986 98-1987 |
GUNITE CORPORATION, |
|
Respondent, |
|
UAW LOCAL 718, |
|
Authorized
Employee Representative. |
|
Before:
RAILTON, Chairman; STEPHENS and ROGERS, Commissioners.
BY
THE COMMISSION:
Gunite
Corporation (“Gunite”) operates a foundry in Rockford, Illinois, where it
manufactures brakes and wheels for heavy trucks. The Occupational Safety and
Health Administration (“OSHA”) conducted a comprehensive safety and health
inspection at Gunite’s facility from April 28 to October 27, 1998. As a result
of the inspection, the Secretary issued three citations alleging numerous
violations of OSHA’s standards concerning both safety and health. After Gunite
contested the citations, the majority of items were settled. Following a
hearing, Administrative Law Judge Ann Z. Cook affirmed the remaining seven
contested items and assessed penalties totaling $102,000.
At
issue on review before the Commission are six items alleging serious and
willful violations of OSHA’s air contaminant standard for overexposure of
employees to crystalline quartz silica (“respirable silica”). Also on review
are willful items alleging a violation of the respiratory protection standard
for failure to inspect respirators to assure proper use and a violation of the
occupational noise standard for failure to provide annual audiograms for
employees exposed to excessive noise. For the reasons that follow, we affirm
two items and vacate four items alleging violations of the airborne contaminant
standard. We affirm the item alleging a violation of the respiratory protection
standard and vacate the item alleging a violation of the occupational noise
standard. We assess a combined penalty of $95,000.
BACKGROUND
Gunite’s
facility is characterized as a “green sand mold foundry.” The production
process begins by forming sand molds from a mixture of sand, clay and water,
and then filling the molds with melted scrap iron poured from a cupola. Once
the iron solidifies, the resultant castings are shaken from the molds and
transported along a series of vibrating conveyors to a cleaning and finishing
area where they are prepared for shipping. As the castings are being shaken
from the molds and transported along the interconnecting conveyors toward the finishing
area, dust from sand containing particles of respirable silica becomes
airborne. Typically, the process requires the use of 400 tons of sand per hour
with approximately 100 pounds of sand per minute being added to replace sand
removed by dust collectors.
At
the time of the inspection, Gunite was utilizing make-up air units, ordinary
fans, and six dust control systems to control airborne dust. Photographs taken
by OSHA during the inspection showed a general buildup of sand on fans, floors,
and other surfaces throughout the foundry. Airflow analysis conducted by OSHA
during the inspection showed that make-up air units were blowing settled dust
off the floor and into the air. Fans blew contaminated dust into employee
breathing zones. There were also holes in the ventilation ducts of the dust
control systems and missing canopies over the interconnecting conveyors that
transported the castings through the production process from the basement area
to the finishing department. Plant manager Mark Vuletich testified that when
the interconnecting conveyors were initially installed in 1989, they “turned
into a disaster” by shaking unmanageable amounts of dust into the air. After
several attempts to “keep the dust down” with water had failed, Gunite attempted
to control the dust by installing covers over the conveyors in 1990. However,
Vuletich admitted that the covers were ineffective in controlling airborne dust
because of gaps between the conveyors and covers. When OSHA arrived to inspect
the facility eight years later, the ineffective covers were still being used.
According
to Gunite’s facilities engineer, Leroy Cator, Gunite initiated a long range
plan in the early 1990s to “clean up the plant” by attacking known
“environmental problems” in various areas of the foundry. The plan coincided
with a 1990 report from one of Gunite’s insurers, Reliance Insurance Company,
indicating that employee exposure to respirable silica exceeded the threshold
limit value (TLV) set by the American Conference of Governmental Industrial
Hygienists (ACGIH). However, despite the subsequent installation of two upgraded dust
collection systems, sampling results by another insurer, Kemper-NATLSCO, in
June 1996, April and August 1997, and March 1998, showed that employees working
in the foundry were being exposed to levels of respirable silica in excess of
OSHA’s PEL. Kemper-NATLSCO recommended in June 1996 that Gunite establish and
follow a respiratory protection program until the company could implement
feasible engineering and administrative controls to limit employee exposure to
the PEL. Gunite developed a written program, but in a follow-up report in April
1997, Kemper-NATLSCO indicated that “[m]anagement stated employees are required
to wear respiratory protection in areas deemed necessary, however strict
employee adherence to this policy is not enforced.” In a subsequent report in
August 1997, Kemper-NATLSCO again indicated that Gunite’s respiratory
protection program required respirator use inside the foundry, but management
acknowledged that “strict employee adherence to this policy [wa]s not
enforced.” Gunite’s implementation of its respiratory protection program did
not improve even after it recorded three cases of silicosis, a condition that
is caused by excessive exposure to respirable silica, in its 1996 and 1997 OSHA
200 logs.
During
the OSHA inspection, Julia E. Evans, an OSHA compliance officer, and Jeff
Milosch, an industrial hygienist for Kemper-NATLSCO, obtained side-by-side
environmental sampling from thirteen employees in the foundry. The sampling results showed that five of the thirteen employees were
exposed to an 8-hour time weighted average of respirable silica in excess of
OSHA’s PEL. OSHA then assigned three members of its Health Response Team (“HRT”)
to evaluate Gunite’s administrative and engineering controls. The HRT issued a report identifying five potential sources of
respirable silica that appeared to be contributing to employee exposures: the
sand plant, the vibrating conveyor system, conveyor belts carrying sand,
vehicular traffic, and settled contaminant on all horizontal surfaces in the
foundry. The report listed various recommendations for administrative and
engineering controls to reduce levels of respirable silica in the foundry,
specifically in targeted areas where sampling results showed that employees
were exposed in excess of the PEL.
Based
on the sampling results and the HRT’s report, the Secretary issued citations
alleging that Gunite committed serious and willful violations of section
1910.1000(c) by exposing employees to respirable silica in excess of OSHA’s PEL
and of section 1910.1000(e) by failing to determine and implement feasible
controls. She also alleged that Gunite willfully violated section
1910.134(e)(4) by failing to inspect to insure proper respirator use. In
addition, the Secretary alleged a willful violation of section 1910.95(g)(6)
for failure to obtain annual audiograms.
We
turn first to the six air contaminant items.
AIR CONTAMINANT STANDARD: 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1000(c) and
(e)
Section
1910.1000(c) requires that employee exposure to respirable silica be limited to
the amount set forth in Table Z-3 of the standard. Section 1910.1000(e)
requires that compliance with the exposure limit in Table Z-3 be met by first
determining and implementing feasible administrative or engineering controls,
and when such controls are not feasible, by using protective equipment or other
protective measures. The Secretary alleged serious and willful violations of
both standards here. In items 8a and 8b of citation 1, she alleged serious
violations of sections 1910.1000(c) and (e), respectively, for overexposing
three employees - a metal pourer, coreset/blowoff operator, and mold line
technician - to respirable silica and for failing to determine and implement
feasible administrative or engineering controls to achieve compliance with the
PEL. She alleged willful violations of the same standards in items 3a and 3b
for overexposing a sprue pull-off operator and in items 4a and 4b for
overexposing a BCP flip operator.
In
affirming the serious and willful violations of section 1910.1000(c), the judge
relied on the sampling results obtained during the inspection that showed
employee exposure to an 8-hour time weighted average of respirable silica in
excess of OSHA’s PEL. She noted that in addition to the results obtained by
OSHA, Gunite’s insurer, Kemper-NATLSCO, also obtained sampling that confirmed
exposure in excess of the PEL. The cited instances of overexposure are shown in
the side-by-side sampling results represented in the chart below:
CITATION ITEM |
SAMPLING DATE |
POSITION |
OSHA |
KEMPER-NATLSCO |
||
PEL Mg/m3 |
ACTUAL Mg/m3 |
PEL Mg/m3 |
ACTUAL Mg/m3 |
|||
Serious
Citation 1, Item 8a |
June
18, 1998 |
Mold
Line Technician |
0.66 |
1.06 |
0.8 |
1.6 |
Coreset-Blowoff |
0.94 |
1.30 |
0.8 |
1.4 |
||
Metal Pourer |
1.22 |
2.03 |
1.5 |
3.5 |
||
Willful
Citation 2, Item 3a |
June
9, 1998 |
Sprue
Pull-Off Operator |
0.70 |
1.16 |
0.76 |
4.7 |
Willful
Citation 2, Item 4a |
June
9, 1998 |
BCP
Flip Operator |
0.27 |
4.5 |
0.15 |
3.5 |
Gunite argues that overexposure was not shown because
air sampling was obtained outside the respirators that were worn by these five
employees. However, we agree with the judge that the Secretary is not required
to obtain air sampling inside the respirator in order to establish exposure to
respirable silica in excess of the PEL. It is well-settled that unless actual
ingestion or inhalation is a specific element of a standard, “the Secretary
need only measure the level of contaminant in the employee’s breathing zone,
and such measurements may even be taken before the air is processed by the
employee’s respirator.” Bay State Refining Co., 15 BNA OSHC 1471, 1472
n. 1, 1991-93 CCH OSHD ¶ 29,579, p. 40,021 n. 1 (No. 88-1731, 1992) (citing Titanium
Metals Corp. of America, 6 BNA OSHC 1760, 1763-64 & n. 11, 1978 CCH
OSHD ¶ 22,836, p. 27,615 & n. 11 (No. 15411, 1978)). Because actual
inhalation is not an element of section 1910.1000(c), the sampling obtained
outside the respirators and within the breathing zone of the employees was
sufficient to establish that the levels of respirable silica exceeded the PEL.
The employer may rebut such a showing by establishing that the sampling results
were not reliable. Ebaa Iron, Inc., 17 BNA OSHC 1051, 1052, 1993-95 CCH
OSHD ¶ 30,685, p. 42,585 (No. 92-3189, 1995). Here, Gunite did not challenge
the procedures by which Evans obtained the samples, and it stipulated to the
reliability of OSHA’s laboratory analyses. Therefore, we find that the
Secretary established that employee exposure to respirable silica exceeded the
PEL.
Section 1910.1000(e) requires employers to determine
and implement administrative or engineering controls whenever feasible, and to
use protective equipment or any other protective measures when such controls
are not feasible to achieve full compliance. The Secretary has the burden of
establishing that controls are technologically and economically feasible. GAF
Corp., 9 BNA OSHC 1451, 1455, 1981 CCH OSHD ¶ 25,281, p. 31,244 (No.
77-1811, 1981). A control is technologically feasible if it can be adapted to
the employer’s operation and is capable of producing a significant reduction in
employee exposure. Id. See also G & C Foundry Co., 17 BNA
OSHC 2137, 2138-40, 1995-97 CCH OSHD ¶ 31,388, pp. 44,340-42 (No. 95-0869,
1997).
The
Secretary’s case for establishing technological feasibility rests primarily on
OSHA’s HRT report and supporting testimony by compliance officer Evans and HRT
members Lee Hathon and Keith Motley. Neither compliance officer Evans nor the
HRT members were qualified as experts. The HRT report identified deficiencies
in Gunite’s controls and recommended additional controls, including general
ventilation to reduce plantwide levels of air contaminant and specific controls
to address areas where sampling results showed employee exposure in excess of
the PEL. The general plantwide controls included recirculating plant air
through bag houses, isolating silica generating operations with physical
barriers, replacing open conveyor belts with sealed systems to transport sand
through the facility, and implementing Gunite’s planned project to cover all
conveyor belts. The specific controls included improving housekeeping;
installing local exhaust ventilation systems, such as clean air islands and
side draft hoods; isolating work areas with curtains or walls; providing
evaporative mists for cooling air; constructing clean air rooms where employees
could spend limited amounts of time breathing uncontaminated air; improving
belt aprons and scrapers on the conveyor belts; and using an alternative
material handling methods, such as pneumatic transport.
We
conclude that the evidence of record as a whole is insufficient to prove that
the controls suggested by the Secretary would produce a significant reduction
in airborne respirable silica in the foundry. Because neither compliance officer Evans nor any of the HRT members
were presented by the Secretary as expert witnesses, the record lacks
sufficient evidence to establish that the proposed controls were
technologically feasible. Moreover, the testimony failed to quantify the expected or anticipated
amount of silica dust reduction. At most, the HRT report provided a list of
control technologies for Gunite to experiment with in the hope that some of
them or some combination of them would reduce employee exposure to some
undefined levels.
Where
administrative or engineering controls are not feasible, the standard requires
that employers use “protective equipment or any other protective measures” to
achieve compliance with the permissible exposure limit set forth in section
1910.1000(c). Here, Gunite argues that it achieved compliance by relying on the
use of respirators. The evidence supports this claim with respect to serious
citation 1, items 8a and 8b, and willful citation 2, items 3a and 3b, but not
with respect to willful citation 2, items 4a and 4b OSHA’s sampling of the
three employees identified in citation 1, items 8a and 8b, showed exposure to
no more than 2.08 times the PEL while each employee wore a disposable
respirator with a protection factor of up to 10 times the PEL. Compliance
officer Evans testified that wearing the respirators “should protect employees,
if they are [using them] properly and the seal is present, [up to] 10 times the
permissible exposure level.” There is nothing in the record to show that the
three employees identified in citation 1, items 8a and 8b, were using their
respirators improperly on the date of the OSHA sampling. Similarly, sampling of
the sprue pull-off operator identified in citation 2, items 3a and 3b, showed
exposure to approximately 1.7 times the permissible limit while he wore both a
half mask respirator and an air powered respirator with a total protection
factor of 35 times the PEL. Because the evidence establishes that Gunite
achieved compliance with the PEL by using adequate respiratory protection, we
vacate serious citation 1, items 8a and 8b, and willful citation 2, items 3a
and 3b.
Regarding
citation 2, items 4a and 4b, the OSHA sampling results showed that the BCP flip
operator identified in the citation was exposed to 16 times the permissible
limit. Thus, his use of a half mask respirator with a protection factor of up
to 10 times the PEL could not have achieved full compliance with the PEL. We
therefore affirm these items.
The
judge affirmed the Secretary’s willful characterization of citation 2, items 4a
and 4b. The Commission has defined a willful violation as one committed with
intentional, knowing, or voluntary disregard for the requirements of the Act,
or with plain indifference to employee safety. A.P. O’Horo Co., 14 BNA
OSHC 2004, 2012, 1991-93 CCH OSHD ¶ 29,223, p. 39,133 (No. 85-0369, 1991). “The
Secretary must show that the employer was actually aware, at the time of the
violative act, that the act was unlawful, or that it possessed a state of mind
such that if it were informed of the standard, it would not care.” Propellex
Corp., 18 BNA OSHC 1677, 1684, 1999 CCH OSHD ¶ 31,792, p. 46,591 (No.
96-0265, 1999) (citations omitted). We agree with the judge that the violations
were willful. The evidence shows that Gunite acted with conscious disregard of
the requirements of the standard. Despite recording three cases of silicosis in
its OSHA-200 log in 1996 and 1997, and receiving repeated warnings from its
insurers that employees were being exposed to high levels of respirable silica,
Gunite failed to comply with the standard. While “[t]he Commission has not
always been willing to base a willful violation on an employer’s failure to
follow an outside consultant’s advice,” an employer’s response to findings and
recommendations made by its outside consultants can be used as a factor in
determining willfulness, “particularly where the employer’s response to safety
recommendations may be fairly characterized as dilatory.” Pepperidge Farm,
Inc., 17 BNA OSHC 1993, 2007-9, 1995-97 CCH OSHD ¶ 31,301, p. 44,019-20
(No. 89-0265, 1997); see also J.A. Jones Constr. Co., 15 BNA OSHC, 2201,
2212, 1993 CCH OSHD ¶ 29,964, 41,031 (No. 87-2059, 1993).
The
record contains seven reports of environmental studies conducted for Gunite by
its consultants over an eight-year period preceding the OSHA inspection. While
two reports in 1990 and 1992 note exposures exceeding the ACGIH TLV without
indicating whether the exposures also exceeded OSHA’s PEL, five subsequent
Kemper-NATLSCO reports between 1996 and 1998 did report employee exposure to
respirable silica exceeding the OSHA PEL and recommended that Gunite require
its employees to wear respiratory protection until engineering and/or
administrative controls were implemented to reduce employee exposures.
According to the Kemper-NATLSCO reports, despite the repeated warnings of
employee overexposure and recommendations for respirator use, Gunite management
admitted it was not enforcing its policy requiring respiratory protection in
areas where respirator use was deemed necessary. Gunite’s failure to take
corrective steps in response to the findings and recommendations made by
Kemper-NATLSCO in the years preceding the inspection, when considered in
conjunction with other evidence showing three cases of silicosis recorded in
Gunite’s OSHA 200 logs in 1996 and 1997, demonstrates that Gunite ignored a
known duty to protect the BCP flip operator from excessive levels of respirable
silica in the foundry. Gunite’s argument that the three silicosis cases were
not shown to have resulted from occupational exposure at its facility does not
diminish the probative value of this evidence in determining willfulness.
The
judge properly rejected Gunite’s argument that its efforts to improve its
ventilation system, by installing two new ventilation systems in the mid-1990s
and finalizing plans for a multimillion-dollar project at the time of the
inspection, should be considered a good faith effort to comply with the
standard. Under Commission precedent, “[i]f an employer has made a good faith
effort to comply with the Act’s requirements, a finding of willfulness is not
justified, even though the employer’s efforts are not entirely effective or
complete.” Williams Enterp., Inc., 13 BNA OSHC 1249, 1256, 1986-87 CCH
OSHD ¶ 27,893, p. 36,589 (No. 85-355, 1987). The test of good faith is whether
the steps taken were objectively reasonable. Pepperidge Farm Inc., 17
BNA OSHC at 2007-09, 1995-1997 CCH OSHD at pp. 44,019-20. “[T]he employer has
the burden of proof on good faith.” Morrison-Knudsen Co./Yonkers Contr. Co.,
16 BNA OSHC 1105, 1127, 1993-95 CCH OSHD ¶ 30,048, p. 41,285 (No. 88-572,
1993). Gunite acknowledged that its efforts to improve its ventilation system
did not achieve full compliance, and its policy of relying on respirators to
achieve compliance with the PEL was not consistently enforced. The BCP operator
testified that he did not wear an air-supplied respirator whenever temperatures
in the foundry were too hot or when the respirator was not functioning
properly. The record shows that the BCP flip operator’s work location was in
the cleaning room of the foundry, an area that Gunite’s manager of facilities
engineering, Mark Morgan, characterized as having a “major” dust problem. The
BCP flip operator worked in this location for two years without the benefit of
administrative or engineering controls and without the consistent use of
respiratory protection. We therefore conclude that Gunite’s efforts to achieve
compliance were not objectively reasonable under the circumstances.
Accordingly, we affirm items 4a and 4b of citation 2 as willful.
The
Secretary proposed a consolidated penalty of $70,000 for citation 2, items 4a
and 4b. The judged reduced the penalty to $40,000. The Secretary argues that
the judge’s penalty assessment does not adequately reflect the gravity of the
violations and the recalcitrance of the employer. Section 17(j) of the Act, 29
U.S.C. 666(i), provides that “[t]he Commission shall have authority to assess
all civil penalties provided in this section, giving due consideration to the
appropriateness of the penalty with respect to the size of the business of the
employer being charged, the gravity of the violation, the good faith of the
employer, and the history of previous violations.” Here, no credit for size or
history is warranted. Gunite is a moderate to large company with 300 employees
and has a history of prior OSHA violations in 1991, 1993, 1994, and 1995.
With
respect to the statutory good faith factor, the Commission will consider “the
employer’s safety and health program and its commitment to assuring safe and
healthful working conditions.” Capform, Inc., 19 BNA OSHC 1374, 1378,
2001 CCH OSHD ¶ 32,320, p. 49,479 (No. 99-0322, 2001), aff'd without
published opinion, No. 01-60417 (6th Cir. 2002). Gunite installed two new
dust collection systems in 1995 and 1997 and was finalizing plans for a
multimillion–dollar project at the time of the inspection. However, these good
intentions are counterbalanced by the fact that Gunite apparently did little in
the way of controlling dust problems through the use of housekeeping measures.
In addition, it failed to maintain ventilation ducts. We also note the glacial
pace at which Gunite moved to solve the engineering problem. It was aware of
the problems at least as early as 1989. Given these countervailing factors, we
see no basis for crediting Gunite with a good faith effort to abate the hazard.
Gravity
is generally the principal factor in assessing penalties. Trinity Indus.,
Inc., 15 BNA OSHC 1481, 1483, 1991-93 CCH OSHD ¶ 29,582, p. 40,033 (No.
88-2691, 1992); Nacirema Operating Co., 1 BNA OSHC 1001, 1971-73 CCH
OSHD ¶ 15,032 (No. 4, 1972). In evaluating the gravity of the violation, the
Commission considers the number of employees exposed, the duration of exposure,
the precautions taken against injury, and the degree of probability that an
injury would occur. See J.A. Jones Constr. Co, 15 BNA OSHC 2201, 2214,
1991-93 CCH OSHD ¶ 29,964, p. 41,033 (No. 87-2059, 1993). Here, the evidence
shows that the BCP flip operator identified in citation 1, items 4a and 4b, was
exposed to more than 16 times the PEL while wearing a half mask respirator with
an insufficient protection factor of only ten times the PEL. We agree with the
judge that the gravity of the violation was high given the duration and level
of exposure, the inconsistent use of the air supplied respirator, the
conditional protection afforded by respirators, and the likelihood of
developing silicosis from such high exposure, even though only one employee was
exposed. Giving due consideration to the high gravity of the offense and
Gunite’s size, history of violations, and the lack of any significant evidence
that Gunite made a good faith effort to assure safe and healthful working
conditions, we affirm the $40,000 penalty assessed by the judge.
RESPIRATORY PROTECTION STANDARD: 29 C.F.R. §
1910.134(e)(4)
In
citation 2, item 2, the Secretary alleged a willful violation of section
1910.134(e)(4) for 7 instances involving Gunite’s failure to conduct frequent
random inspections to assure that respirators were properly used. The judge
affirmed the violation as willful based on compliance officer Evans’ testimony
that she observed numerous instances of improper respirator use during the
inspection. The judge rejected Gunite’s claim that the cited version of section
1910.134(e)(4) had been amended and did not apply, as well as its claim that Gunite’s
employees were not exposed to a hazard requiring the use of respirators. On
review, Gunite does not dispute the factual allegations with respect to
non-compliance with the terms of the standard or knowledge of the cited
conditions, but it reiterates the arguments rejected by the judge. Gunite also
challenges the willful characterization.
We
agree with the judge’s finding that the previous version of the respiratory
protection standard was properly cited because the alleged instances of violation
occurred before the amended standard took effect on October 5, 1998. The
amended standard states that the effective date of promulgation was April 8,
1998, and the effective date for full compliance was October 5, 1998. Section 1910.134(n). It further states that the previous respiratory
protection standard remained “in effect and enforceable” during the intervening
period between the April 8 and October 5, 1998. The alleged instances of
noncompliance occurred before October 5, 1998, and therefore, the Secretary
properly cited the previous standard.
With
respect to Gunite’s argument that the Secretary failed to establish that the
employees identified in the citation were exposed to a hazard requiring
respiratory protection, we find that Gunite is correct with respect to the
instance alleging that unidentified employees placed their respirators on top
of their sand-covered hard hats when not in use. Compliance officer Evans
testified that she observed this conduct when employees were leaving the
foundry. The record contains no evidence to suggest that any of the employees
reused the contaminated respirators upon reentering the foundry.
The
other cited instances of violation involved respirator misuse by employees
working inside the foundry where environmental sampling during the inspection
exceeded the OSHA PEL for respirable silica. The evidence shows that for years
preceding the OSHA inspection, environmental sampling inside the foundry had
shown levels that consistently exceeded the OSHA PEL as indicated in reports by
Kemper-NATLSCO. In response to these reports, Gunite designated the entire
foundry a mandatory respiratory protection area during production hours. This
evidence and the documented cases of silicosis recorded in OSHA 200 logs in
1996 and 1997, establish that there was a significant risk of encountering
hazardous levels of respirable silica inside the foundry, and that Gunite had a
duty to conduct frequent, random, inspections to insure proper respirator use. See
Weirton Steel Corp., 20 BNA OSHC 1255, 1259-61, 2003 CCH OSHD ¶ 32,672, pp.
51,449-51 (No. 98-0701, 2003). Accordingly, we find that the Secretary has proven
a violation of section 1910.134(e)(4).
We
agree with the judge that Gunite’s lax enforcement of respirator use in the
foundry constituted willfulness. The Kemper-NATLSCO reports establish that
despite repeated warnings of excessive levels of respirable silica in the
foundry, Gunite management admitted that the use of respirators in areas deemed
necessary was not strictly enforced. See Caterpillar Inc. v. Secretary of
Labor, 154 F.3d 400, 402 (7th Cir. 1998), aff’g, 18 BNA OSHC 1005,
1995-97 CCH OSHD ¶ 31,386 (No. 93-3405, 1997) (violation willful where employer
knew about hazardous condition and could have corrected the problem but failed
to do so). This evidence, taken together with the three cases of silicosis
recorded in Gunite’s OSHA-200 log in 1996 and 1997, shows that Gunite ignored a
known duty to comply with the respiratory protection standard. Under these
circumstances, we find no basis for Gunite’s argument that it made good faith
efforts to comply with the standard. Accordingly, we conclude that the
violation was willful.
The
judge assessed a penalty of $25,000 rather than the $55,000 proposed by the
Secretary. In reducing the penalty from $55,000 to $25,000, the judge found the
probability of harm to be lesser because the evidence did not show that the
violative conduct led to damaged respirators or actual overexposure of
employees. However, compliance officer Evans testified that a reduction for
lesser probability had already been factored into the proposed amount of
$55,000. The Secretary argues that the judge’s penalty assessment was not
commensurate with the gravity of the violation and Gunite’s recalcitrance. We
agree. Although Gunite argues that it made several attempts to address safety
and health in the foundry (including engaging outside consultants to monitor
exposure levels, implementing a respiratory protection program, providing
disposable respirators in unlimited numbers and training employees to use them,
and posting notices warning of disciplinary action for failure to comply with
the policy, credit for these efforts is diminished by evidence showing that
Gunite did not enforce the use of respirators inside the foundry where air
sampling exceeded permissible exposure limits despite the repeated warnings and
advice of its own consultants.
Accordingly,
we find a penalty of $55,000 to be appropriate.
AUDIOGRAM STANDARD: 29 C.F.R. § 1910.95(g)(6)
The
Secretary alleged in Citation 2, item 1, a willful violation of section
1910.95(g)(6) for Gunite’s failure to obtain annual audiograms for five
employees exposed to noise at or above an 8-hour time weighted average of 85
decibels (“dBA”). The record shows that Gunite did not obtain annual audiograms
for one employee in 1996 and four employees in 1997 after initial baseline
audiograms of those employees had shown exposure to noise levels exceeding an
8-hour time weighted average of 85 dBA. In all five instances, Gunite obtained
audiograms the following year. The judge affirmed the citation, but
reclassified it as serious based on the lack of evidence to show that Gunite
management knew of and disregarded internal memos regarding the missed
audiograms by the company’s health services department.
On
review, Gunite argues that the citation was time-barred under section 9(c) of
the Act, which states that “[n]o citation may be issued under this section
after the expiration of six months following the occurrence of any violation.”
We agree with Gunite that none of the cited instances of noncompliance remained
unabated when the inspection began on May 26, 1998, or within six months of the
issuance of the citation on November 23, 1998. Accordingly, we vacate the item
alleging violation of section 1910.95(g)(6).
For the reasons
stated, we order the following disposition:
Items 8a and 8b
of Citation 1 are vacated.
Item 1 of
Citation 2 is vacated.
Item 2 of
Citation 2 is affirmed as willful, and a penalty of $55,000 is assessed.
Items 3a and 3b
of Citation 2 are vacated.
Items 4a and 4b of Citation 2 are affirmed as
willful, and a penalty of $40,000 is assessed.
/s/
W.
Scott Railton
Chairman
/s/
James
M. Stephens
Commissioner
Dated: September 30, 2004
ROGERS,
Commissioner, concurring in part and dissenting in part:
While
I concur with the decision to affirm the willful violations of 29 C.F.R. §§
1910.1000(c) and (e) with respect to citation 2, items 4a and 4b, my analysis
of the case differs from that of my colleagues. I respectfully disagree with
their conclusion that the record “is insufficient to prove that the controls
suggested by the Secretary would produce a significant reduction in airborne
respirable silica in the foundry.” In contrast, I would have found that the
controls suggested by the Secretary were technologically feasible and thus
affirmed citation 2, items 4a and b, on that basis, along with the other
alleged violations of 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.1000(c) and (e), with respect to citation
1, items 8a and 8b, and citation 2, items 3a and 3b.
The cited standard at 1910.1000(c) limits an
employee’s exposure to respirable silica. The standard at 1910.1000(e) further
provides that when administrative and engineering “controls are not feasible to
achieve full compliance, protective equipment . . . shall be used to keep the
exposure of employees to air contaminants within the limits” of subsection (c).
See Todd Shipyards Corp., 9 BNA OSHC 2031, 2034, 1981 CCH OSHD ¶
25,516, p. 31,812 (No. 77-2545, 1981) (purpose of section is limitation of
employee exposure to air contaminants). Under the standard, the preferred
protection is through engineering or administrative controls, with personal
protective equipment such as respirators as a backstop. See id. This is
consistent with “an elementary principle of industrial engineering and hygiene,
‘the hierarchy of controls,’ . . . that hazards should be controlled at the
source.” Rothstein, Occupational Safety and Health Law § 108 at 167 (4th
ed. 1998).
OSHA’s Health Response Team (HRT) focussed its
inspection on the workstations where sampling results showed employee exposure
in excess of the Permissible Exposure Limit (PEL). As a result of the
inspection, the HRT submitted a comprehensive report identifying housekeeping
and ventilation problems at each of the cited areas and recommending a number
of feasible administrative and engineering controls to remedy the problems. It
stated that “[p]rograms such as housekeeping and employee hygiene¼will have a significant effect if used in
conjunction with other administrative and engineering controls.” As the judge
noted in her decision, “except for clean air islands, Gunite [did] not
challenge[ ] these recommendations.” In my view, the judge correctly found that
the Secretary met her burden of showing that feasible administrative and
engineering controls were available to provide a significant reduction in
exposure at the five cited positions. See G & C Foundry Co., 17 BNA
OSHC 2137, 2140, 1995-97 CCH OSHD ¶ 31,388, p. 44,342 (No. 95-0869, 1997)
(technological feasibility established where Secretary shows “that there are
some controls available¼that will have a significant
effect on the amount of silica dust that reaches the employees’ breathing
zones”). Moreover, the fact that the Secretary did not present the HRT members
as experts does not diminish the probative value of their testimony. HRT member
Lee Hathon, like the expert presented by the Secretary in G&C Foundry,
Co., 17 BNA OSHC at 2138, 1995-97 CCH OSHD at p. 44,340, was an OSHA
mechanical engineer. He testified that he had worked with OSHA’s HRT for 10
years and that his credentials included Master of Science degrees in mechanical
engineering and in public health. HRT member Keith Motley, an industrial hygienist
with OSHA’s HRT for 12 years, stated that he had Bachelor of Science degrees in
biology and chemistry and a Master of Science degree in public health. In my
view, the credentials of these witnesses make their testimony sufficiently
reliable. Gunite did not challenge the expertise of the Secretary’s witnesses.
To the extent that the majority would find dispositive the lack of “expert”
testimony from the Secretary in order to meet her burden, and since this issue
has not previously been briefed, I would remand this case to permit the parties
to brief the issue or in the alternative request that they submit supplemental
briefs to the Commission. See The Sherwin-Williams Co., 11 BNA OSHC
2105, 2110, 1984-85 CCH OSHD ¶ 26,986, p. 34,702 (No. 14131, 1984) (“realism
and common sense should dictate how the Secretary may meet his burden of
providing substantial evidence of feasibility” (citing Castle & Cooke
Foods, 692 F.2d 641, 650 (9th Cir. 1982)).
On review, Gunite renews its
argument against the feasibility of clean air islands, which the HRT report
recommended as feasible at the workstations of the BCP flip operator, sprue
pull-off operator, and coreset/blowoff operator. The report stated that a clean
air island at each of these workstations would supply clean, tempered air at
approximately 100 to 200 feet per minute to the breathing zone of the employee.
HRT member Motley described the clean air island as an air diffuser that “would
blow down over the employee’s head and breathing zone and enclose them in a
cone of clean air.” Gunite argues that Motley had observed the use of clean air
islands only in battery manufacturing facilities to protect against lead and
cadmium exposure, but had never observed them used in foundries. Gunite’s
argument is undermined by the testimony of its own witness, facilities engineer
Cator, who stated that “[c]lean air islands are probably effective and I don’t
question that.” Cator initially testified that Gunite had rejected clean air
islands targeting individual workstations in favor of a “dust collector large
enough to handle the problem without adding another piece of equipment, which
becomes another piece of equipment to maintain.” However, as the judge noted,
the record contains no evidence that Gunite’s dust collection systems were
effective in achieving compliance at the cited areas. While Cator stated that
Gunite had rejected clean air islands because they brought outdoor air into
individual work areas to create uncomfortably hot conditions in summer and cold
conditions in winter, he later admitted that such outdoor air could be tempered
to an acceptable degree and that Gunite actually operated a clean air
ventilation system along the pouring line area of its foundry where the air was
conditioned in summer and heated in the winter.
Gunite also raises a broad
challenge to the technological feasibility of any kind of local exhaust
ventilation (LEV) system by claiming that “no type of local exhaust ventilation
possibly would be capable of removing” the 400 tons of silica sand that its
foundry processed each hour. This argument misreads the recommendations in the
HRT report, which did not recommend LEV to remove all 400 tons of sand from the
plant but rather to aim LEV at the cited workstations. Gunite’s other argument
is that the Secretary’s failure to identify specific abatement methods in the
citation indicates that she “had no idea what controls would work under the
circumstances.” Mandating the implementation of specific administrative and
engineering controls in the abatement order was not required here, however,
because an employer “is not precluded from using other means of engineering or
administrative controls if it so chooses, so long as those means reduce the
level of silica dust at least to the same extent” as the Secretary’s proposals.
Smith Steel Casting Co., 15 BNA OSHC 1001, 1012 n. 16, 1991-93 CCH OSHD
¶ 29,314, pp. 29,371-72 n. 16 (No. 80-2069, 1991) (consolidated).
Having found that the
Secretary met her burden of showing the existence of feasible engineering and
administrative controls, I would have accordingly also affirmed the other
alleged violations of 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.1000(c) and (e) based on Gunite’s
failure to implement those controls.
/s/
Thomasina
V. Rogers
Commissioner
Dated: September
30, 2004
SECRETARY OF LABOR, |
|
Complainant, |
|
v. |
OSHRC DOCKET NOS. 98-1986
and 98-1987 |
GUNITE CORPORATION, Respondent. |
|
UAW LOCAL 718, Authorized
Employee Representative. |
|
APPEARANCES:
For
the Complainant:
Susan
Witz, Esquire, and Ruben Chapa, Esquire, U.S. Department of Labor, Office
of
the Solicitor, 230 South Dearborn, Room 844, Chicago, Illinois 60604
For
the Respondent:
Robert
E. Mann, Esquire, Franczek Sullivan, P.C., 300 South Wacker Drive, Suite
3400,
Chicago, Illinois 60606
For
the Authorized Employee Representative:
Benny
Crawford, President, UAW, Local 718, Gunite Corporation, 302 Peoples
Avenue,
Rockford, Illinois 61104-7092
Before: Administrative
Law Judge Ann Z. Cook
DECISION
AND ORDER
This
proceeding is before the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (“the
Commission”) pursuant to section 10(c) of the Occupational Safety and Health
Act of 1970, 29 U.S.C. § 651 et seq. (“the Act”). Respondent, Gunite
Corporation (“Gunite”), operates a foundry that produces various parts for
heavy trucks. (Tr. 469). Gunite acknowledges that it is an employer engaged in
a business affecting interstate commerce and that it is subject to the
requirements of the Act, and I so find. (Answer ¶ 1). The Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (“OSHA”) conducted an inspection of Gunite’s foundry
from April 28, 1998 through October 27, 1998, resulting in the issuance of
serious, willful and “other” citations. Gunite timely contested the citations,
and this matter was set for hearing. The parties achieved a partial settlement
prior to the hearing, leaving for resolution two serious items, five willful
items, and proposed penalties of $319,000. The hearing was held in Rockford,
Illinois, on June 5, 6 and 7, 2000. The Secretary and Gunite filed post-hearing
briefs on September 6, 2000.
Background
Gunite’s
foundry produces parts for heavy trucks by pouring molten iron into sand molds
and then removing the parts from the molds and cleaning and preparing them for
shipping. The process begins with melting scrap metal in the cupola and pouring
it into molds on the pouring line. The molds move along conveyor belts to the
Mold Unit, where the molds are knocked off, while the parts continue on to the
cleaning room via a vibrating conveyor line called the “shakeout line” or the
“GK Line.” The parts are then conveyed through blasting machines, after which
they are painted and put on pallets for shipment. The parts weigh up to 150
pounds and are extremely hot as they move along the conveyor lines, and the
manufacturing process releases large amounts of sand that become airborne dust
and then accumulate on surfaces. The sand contains silica, which is a toxic
material, and overexposure to silica can lead to silicosis, a progressive and
potentially life-threatening lung disease. To reduce the amount of sand in the
air, and therefore the amount of respirable silica, Gunite had six dust control
systems at the time of the inspection, as well as exhaust fans and air makeup
units. Nevertheless, the large amount of sand used (an average of 400 tons an
hour, most of which was cleaned and recycled) resulted in accumulations of dust
and sand throughout the foundry, and Gunite’s OSHA 200 logs for 1996 and 1997
recorded three cases of silicosis. (Tr. 35, 58-59, 249-50, 349-50, 431-43,
469-73, 478-83, 486; CX-5, pp. 10, 15, 21; CX-85).
OSHA’s
inspection of Gunite’s foundry was a comprehensive safety and health
inspection, conducted by Julie Evans, an OSHA Industrial Hygienist (“IH”),
Vilma Cantu, an OSHA Compliance Officer, (“CO”), and John Newquist, an OSHA
Safety and Health Specialist (“SHS”). Of the seven contested items resulting from the inspection, six
involve sand and respirable silica. In connection with the latter, the
Secretary alleges one serious and two willful violations relating to employee
exposure to respirable silica above the permissible exposure limit (“PEL”) and
failure to implement feasible controls. The Secretary also alleges one serious
and one willful violation pertaining to accumulations of sand in working areas,
one willful violation involving the use of respirators, and one willful
violation involving audiograms.
The Secretary’s Burden of Proof
To
establish a violation of a standard, the Secretary has the burden of proving,
by a preponderance of the evidence:
(a) the applicability of the cited
standard, (b) the employer’s noncompliance with the standard’s terms, (c)
employee access to the violative conditions, and (d) the employer’s actual or
constructive knowledge of the violation (i.e., the employer either knew,
or with the exercise of reasonable diligence could have known, of the violative
conditions).
Atlantic
Battery Co., 16 BNA OSHC 2131, 2138
(No. 90-1747, 1994).
Exposure to Respirable Silica - 29 C.F.R. §§
1910.1000(c) and (e)
The
Secretary alleges that Gunite was in serious violation of 29 C.F.R. §§
1910.1000(c) and (e) by exposing three employees to respirable silica in excess
of the PEL and failing to determine and implement controls to achieve
compliance. (Docket No. 98-1987, Citation 1, Items 8a and b). The Secretary
alleges willful violations of the same standards for exposing two further
employees to respirable silica in excess of the PEL. (Docket No. 98-1987,
Citation 2, Items 3a and b and 4a and b, respectively).The cited standards
provide, in pertinent part, as follows:
(c) An employee’s exposure to any
substance listed in Table Z-3, in any 8-hour work shift of a 40-hour work
shift, shall not exceed the 8-hour time weighted average limit given for that
substance in the table.
(e) To achieve compliance with paragraphs
(a) through (d) of this section, administrative or engineering controls must
first be determined and implemented whenever feasible. When such controls are
not feasible to achieve full compliance, protective equipment or any other
protective measures shall be used to keep the exposure of employees to air
contaminants within the limits prescribed by this section.
Employee Exposure
On
June 9, 1998, IH Evans monitored two employees for exposure to respirable
silica, a substance listed in Table Z-3. Jeffrey Milosch of Kemper/Natlsco
(“Kemper”), Gunite’s insurance company, performed simultaneous monitoring of
the same employees. The monitoring results Evans and Milosch obtained were,
respectively: Sprue Pull-Off Operator, 1.7 and 6.0 times the PEL, and BCP Flip
Operator, 16.6 and 25.0 times the PEL. On June 18, 1998, Evans and Milosch monitored three other employees
and obtained the following results, respectively: Metal Pourer, 2.03 milligrams
per cubic meter (“mg/m3”) with a PEL of 1.22, and 3.5 mg/m3 with a 1.5 PEL;
Coreset/Blowoff Operator, 1.30 mg/m3 with a PEL of 0.91, and 1.4 mg/m3 with a
0.8 PEL; and Mold Line Technician, 1.06 mg/m3 with a 0.66 PEL, and 1.6 mg/m3
with a 0.8 PEL. (Tr. 42-43, 50, 97, 105, 124-25; CX-12). The evidence thus
establishes overexposure of the five employees.
On
six occasions during 1996, 1997 and 1998, Kemper had monitored employees and
found overexposure to respirable silica. During two 1996 visits, Kemper found
five employees to be overexposed, including the Sprue Pull-Off Operator Evans
monitored. (Tr. 52-53; 304-05; CX-7-8, CX-11). In June of 1997, monitoring
revealed employees working in Metal Pourer, Coreset/Blowoff Operator and Mold
Line Technician positions were overexposed, and in August of 1997, monitoring
showed the Sprue Pull-Off Operator position as overexposed at three times the
PEL. (Tr. 54, 307-11; CX-9-10). In March of 1998, monitoring showed a BCP Flip
Operator, a Coreset/Blowoff Operator and others to have been overexposed. (Tr.
313-14; CX-12). Beginning in April of 1997, Kemper’s reports to Gunite’s
management recommended that engineering and/or administrative controls be
adopted to reduce exposure and that respirators be used until controls brought
exposure below the PEL. (Tr. 48, 53-57, 306-15). Gunite therefore knew that
employees were being overexposed.
Gunite
asserts that the five employees were not overexposed because they wore or had
available respiratory gear that lowered actual personal exposure below the PEL.
It notes that the Metal Pourer, Coreset/Blowoff Operator, Mold Line Technician,
and Sprue Pull-Off Operator were wearing respirators with a protection factor
of ten and were thus protected well beyond the PEL exposure measured. (Tr. 213-14).
Gunite also notes that the Sprue Pull-Off Operator wore an air hood with a
protection factor of 25, increasing his protection to 250 times PEL. (Tr. 203,
214). Finally, Gunite notes that the BCP Flip Operator, whose exposure was 16.6
to 25 times the PEL, also had an air hood at his position but wore only a
respirator providing protection ten times the PEL. (Tr. 205-07, 222-23). Gunite
maintains that the silica inhalation of four employees was below the PEL and
that that of the fifth would have been below the PEL had he used the protective
gear provided.
It
is apparent from the above that Gunite interprets “an employee’s exposure” in
subsection (a) of the standard to mean an employee’s actual inhalation.
However, this interpretation creates a conflict with subsection (e). The clear
dictate of subsection (e) is to rely on personal protective equipment to keep
employee exposure below the PEL only if administrative or engineering controls
are not feasible. The Eleventh Circuit noted the reasonableness of this
approach in American Iron and Steel Inst., 182 F.3d 1261, 1267-69 (11th
Cir. 1999), because controls eliminate or arrest a hazard at its source, making
respiratory protection automatic, while respirators depend on constant
attention and absence of human error to be effective. Gunite’s assertion is
therefore rejected, and I find that the five employees monitored by IH Evans
and by Milosch were exposed to respirable silica in excess of the PEL in
violation of 29 C.F.R. 1910.1000(c).
Engineering/Administrative Controls
The
Secretary alleges that Gunite failed to determine and implement feasible
administrative or engineering controls to achieve compliance with the PEL for
the five overexposed employees as 29 C.F.R. 1910.1000(e) required. OSHA’s HRT
studied ventilation at the foundry and suggested controls it represents were
feasible and would bring each position within the PEL. Gunite contends that it
had adopted a program that abated the overexposures by the end of the abatement
period.
The
record shows that the foundry building was built between 1919 and 1930. (Tr.
480). At the time of the inspection, the actual foundry area was served by six
dust control systems, four air makeup units, and wall exhaust fans, which
together replaced the in-plant air once every six to seven minutes. (Tr.
431-32, 449-50). With the exception of two systems installed in 1995 and 1997,
the dust control systems had been in place for several years. (Tr. 431-41, 450,
509-13; RX-1). The testimony of IH Evans and the photographic evidence
establish that the systems were in disrepair, that maintenance had not been
done, that ventilation pipes had holes or were no longer aligned, and that fan
blades had holes and/or accumulations of dust. Fans used for cooling blew dust
around, sometimes into employees’ work spaces, and on one occasion the dust was
dense enough to obstruct vision. (Tr. 34, 68-84, 557-58; CX-55-57, CX-60-61).
During
its inspection, OSHA monitored 13 foundry employees and found five overexposed
to silica. All five worked in the vicinity of the “shakeout line,” commonly
called the “GK Line.” The GK Line runs approximately 700 feet from where the
parts are removed from the molds, past the Sprue Pull-Off Operator, who
separates any excess metal from the parts, to the BCP Flip Operator, who aligns
the castings on the conveyor belt before they enter the Cleaning Unit. (Tr. 40,
97, 473-76; CX-85). The GK Line vibrates vigorously at a high frequency and
throws off large amounts of sand and dust. OSHA’s monitoring showed the
greatest overexposure at the end of the GK Line, where the BCP Flip Operator
worked (16.6 times the PEL), with much less overexposure at the beginning of
the line, where the Sprue Pull-Off Operator worked (1.7 times the PEL), and on
the pouring line, where the three other overexposed employees worked. Sand and
dust from the GK Line was poorly contained. There were holes in the canopy and
ducts over the line, ventilation pipes were no longer aligned, and sand escaped
from the gaps between the line and the canopy. Fans used for cooling blew sand
and dust into work spaces, and the system was ineffective in removing the sand
and dust the line generated. (Tr. 68-83; CX-55-57, CX-60). There were no local ventilation
systems at the overexposed positions, leaving respiratory protection to the
general ventilation systems, the air-supplied hoods at the BCP Flip and Sprue
Pull-Off positions, and the individual respirators.
Gunite
argues that it had a program to reduce exposure through engineering controls
applied area-by-area in a deliberate, orderly manner. The plan first addressed
the more populated plant areas, evaluated the effect of controls installed
there, and then proceeded to the next area. Under the program, new ventilation
systems had been installed in 1995 (for the cupola, the pouring line, and the
area where parts are separated from their molds) and in 1997 (for the sand
cooler). (Tr. 461-66, 509-517). In 1998, work began on a system to address the
sand and dust generated by the GK Line, which Gunite had been unsuccessful in
containing since the line was installed in 1989. (Tr. 497-500, 509-12;
CX-7-12). In August of 1997, Gunite began plans for a new cleaning room and a
new dust control system for the GK Line, including the BCP Flip Operator
position. Contracts for the project were let in March of 1998, work went on
during the summer, and the system was installed over the Christmas shutdown in
December of 1998. (Tr. 461-66, 512-17; RX-21-22, RX-24). The project included
nearly full enclosure of the conveyor and also included a new cleaning room and
a bag house. When it was completed in March of 1999, the cost was $2.8 million.
(Tr. 465, 514-16).
OSHA’s
HRT visited the foundry in October of 1998, before the project was completed,
and made specific recommendations for bringing each of the overexposed
positions below the PEL, and, except for clean air islands, Gunite has not
challenged these recommendations. (Tr. 528; CX-13). While Gunite assumes its
new system achieves compliance with the PEL at the five overexposed positions,
it offered no recent monitoring results in support of its belief. Further, IH
Evans testified that the improvements would not achieve compliance at the Sprue
Pull-Off and BCP Flip positions. (Tr. 231-32). The evidence of record shows
that Gunite knew shortly after the GK Line was installed in 1989 that it
created a serious dust problem. Despite this knowledge, Gunite continued to use
what it knew to be an inadequate dust control system over the line until the
new system was installed in December of 1998. (Tr. 484-86). In the nine-year
interim, Gunite relied on respirators, air-supplied hoods and an inadequate,
ill-maintained ventilation system to protect the five positions. I find that
Gunite did not determine and implement administrative or engineering controls
to achieve compliance with the PEL for the five employees and thereby violated
29 C.F.R. 1910.1000(e).
Classification and Penalty
The
citation item involving the Metal Pourer, Coreset/Blowoff Operator and Mold
Line Technician (Docket No. 98-1987, Citation 1, Item 8) has been classified as
a serious violation. A violation is serious when it is substantially probable
that a resulting injury would have been serious in nature. Hamilton Fixture,
16 BNA OSHC 1073, 1085 (No. 88-1720, 1993). The overexposure at the three
positions was less than twice the PEL, but it was documented in three
successive Kemper reports between April 1997 and March 1998. Because overexposure
to silica can cause silicosis, a disabling, life-threatening disease, and
because respirators cannot be relied upon for long-term, effective protection,
I find that the violation is properly characterized as serious.
The
citation items involving the Sprue Pull-Off Operator and the BCP Flip Operator
(Docket No. 98-1987, Citation 2, Items 3 and 4, respectively) have been
classified as willful violations. In regard to this classification, the
Commission has stated that:
A violation is willful if committed with
intentional, knowing or voluntary disregard for the requirements of the Act or
with plain indifference to employee safety....[It] is differentiated from a
nonwillful violation by a heightened awareness, a conscious disregard or plain
indifference to employee safety....A willful charge is not justified if an
employer has made a good faith effort to comply with a standard or to eliminate
a hazard, even though the employer’s efforts are not entirely effective or
complete. George Campbell Painting Corp., 18 BNA OSHC 1929, 1934 (No.
94-3121, 1999) (citation omitted), aff’d 73 F.3d 1466 (8th Cir. 1996).
The
evidence establishes that Gunite knew that the Sprue Pull-Off Operator and the
BCP Flip Operator were being overexposed to silica. The dust in the air and
sand accumulations were easily observable, and Gunite’s management was aware
shortly after the GK Line was installed in 1998 that excessive dust and sand
were being expelled and that there was no “easy fix” to the problem. (Tr.
484-86, 497-500). In 1991, air sampling was done that showed silica levels to
be high. (Tr. 498-99; CX-6). Management reviewed the Kemper reports, which
showed overexposure in the Sprue Pull-Off position in 1996, 1997 and 1998 and
in the BCP Flip position in 1997 and 1998. (Tr. 48, 53-57, 307-15). Management
also knew employees had been diagnosed with silicosis in 1996 and 1997 because
this information was recorded in its OSHA 200 logs. (Tr. 58-59; CX-5). Gunite
nonetheless failed to deal with this issue until mid-1997, relying instead on
respiratory gear employees could choose not to wear and a ventilation system it
did not adequately maintain or repair.
Based
on the foregoing, I disagree with Gunite’s contention that it was making a
sincere effort to comply with the standard. The dust problem in the foundry was
longstanding, as was the neglect of the ventilation system, and despite the new
system now in place, there is no evidence that the two cited positions are in
compliance with the standards. I conclude that Gunite has exhibited conscious
disregard of the standards and/or plain indifference to employee safety. The
Secretary has accordingly met her burden of demonstrating that the violations
were willful.
The
Secretary has proposed a penalty of $7,000 for Item 8 of Serious Citation 1 and
a penalty of $70,000 each for Items 3 and 4 of Willful Citation 2. Section
17(j) of the Act requires the Commission to give due consideration to the
gravity of the violation and the employer’s size, history and good faith when
assessing penalties. The gravity of the violation, generally the most
significant factor, depends upon such matters as the number of employees
exposed, the duration of the exposure, the precautions taken against injury, and
the likelihood that an injury would result. J.A. Jones Constr. Co., 15
BNA OSHC 2201, 2214 (No. 87-2059, 1993). In regard to size, history and good
faith, Gunite is a large employer, having about 300 employees at its facility,
and the company has a history of previous violations. As to good faith, the
record shows that Gunite cooperated with OSHA during the lengthy and
comprehensive inspection. However, Gunite’s record of past violations, and the
finding of willful violations, precludes giving the company credit for good
faith. (Tr. 144; CX-1).
With
respect to gravity, turning first to Item 4 of Citation 2 (the BCP Flip
Operator violation), OSHA’s proposed penalty of $70,000 was based on an
assessment of high severity and greater probability. (Tr. 129). The exposure to
silica was measured at l6.6 times the PEL by OSHA and 25 times the PEL by
Milosch. IH Keith Motley of the HRT testified that overexposure at ten times
the PEL is considered chronic even with respirators because they are much less reliable
than engineering controls. He further testified that while air hoods offer more
protection, their protective value can be compromised. (Tr. 350-53). When
monitored the BCP Flip Operator was wearing a respirator, which, if fitted
properly, would provide protection at ten times the PEL. An air-supplied hood
was available but he was not using it, and he indicated he did not wear it when
it was too hot or when it broke down. (Tr. 114-16, 381-82). The Kemper reports
establish overexposure at that position in August 1997 and March 1998, although
at much lower concentrations than that measured by OSHA. I conclude that the
gravity of the violation was high given the duration and level of exposure, the
inconsistent use of the air hood, the conditional protection afforded by
respirators, and the likelihood of developing silicosis from such high
exposure, even though only one employee was exposed. Considering all the
relevant information, I find a penalty of $40,000 for this item to be
appropriate.
OSHA
also determined the gravity of Item 3 of Citation 2 (the Sprue Pull-Off
violation) to be of higher severity and greater probability, and again proposed
a penalty of $70,000. Monitoring for this position showed much lower exposure,
1.7 and 6.0 times the PEL, and, since the employee used both an air hood and a
respirator, actual inhalation was likely within the PEL. The duration of the
overexposure, however, may have been longer, since it was noted in June 1996,
August 1997, and March 1998 (overexposure was not found in September 1996 and
April 1997). In these circumstances, I find the gravity to be less high for
Item 3 and a penalty of $20,000 to be appropriate.
As
noted above, the proposed penalty for the serious violation concerning the
Metal Pourer, Mold Technician and Coreset/Blowoff Operator, is $7,000. The
three positions were exposed at less than two times the PEL. Kemper found
overexposure of similar magnitude for all three positions in April and August
1997 and in March 1998. The Secretary classified this violation as serious
rather than willful primarily because she believed the new ventilation system
would bring the three positions into compliance. In view of the number of
employees overexposed and the duration of the documented overexposure, I find
the gravity to be high and the $7,000 penalty proposed appropriate.
Respirator Use - 29 C.F.R. 1910.134(e)(4)
In
Docket No. 98-1987, Citation 2, Item 2, the Secretary alleges seven instances
of failure to conduct frequent random inspections to assure respirators were
properly selected, used, cleaned and maintained, in willful violation of 29
C.F.R. 1910.134(e)(4). That section provides as follows:
Respiratory protection is no better than
the respirator in use, even though it is worn conscientiously. Frequent random
inspections shall be conducted by a qualified individual to assure that
respirators are properly selected, used, cleaned, and maintained.
To
prove the alleged violation, the Secretary offered the testimony of IH Evans as
to what she observed during the 15 days she visited the foundry, as well as her
conversations with management. Evans testified that Gunite had a respirator
program that required employees to wear respirators in the foundry area. (Tr.
141, 147-156). In regard to the specific instances alleged, that is, (b)
through (h), Evans observed the following:
(b)
On July 29, 1998, the Coremaker was working in an area designated by Gunite’s
respiratory program as a mandatory respirator area (“mandatory area”) while
wearing a two-strap respirator with only one strap. After discussing this with
Ruth Nicol, Gunite’s Technician for Safety and Training, who was with her,
Evans again observed the Coremaker on August 5, 1998 in the same area wearing a
respirator with only one strap. Although both Nichol and Mark Morgan, Gunite’s
Manager of Facilities Engineering, accompanied her, she saw no corrective
action taken. Evans testified that to fit tightly and create a seal, both
straps must be worn. (Tr. 144-48; CX-19).
(c)
When performing air monitoring in the basement, Evans found employees working
there wearing half-mask respirators instead of the powered air-purifying
respirators Gunite required. Evans mentioned her observation to Nicol, who had
accompanied her. (Tr. 148-49).
(d)
At another time Evans observed employees, who were leaving the foundry area,
roll the tops and bottoms of their respirators together and place them on top
of their hard hats. Evans testified that rolling the respirators in this manner
could deform them and compromise their seals. Since the hard hats were covered
with dust, placing the respirators on them could also allow sand to get inside
the respirators. Evans discussed her observation and concern with Nicol and/or
Morgan, but she observed the practice to continue unchanged over roughly five
months. (Tr. 149-51).
(e)
By the GK Line, Evans observed an employee engaged in sand removal take off his
respirator, take a drink from a can of soda pop, and replace his respirator.
Evans testified that each time he did so, the employee risked not getting a
proper seal and exposure to silica. There were supervisors in and out of the
area, which was designated a mandatory area. Evans discussed her observation
with Nicol and noticed no change. (Tr. 151-52).
(f)
While accompanying an employee into a mandatory area, Evans watched him put on
his half-mask respirator with both straps around his neck rather than placing
one strap around his head. Evans testified this compromised the
respirator-to-face seal, and while she discussed the matter with Nicol, who was
present, she noticed this behavior repeated throughout the inspection. (Tr.
152-54).
(g)
On June 9, 1998, Evans saw the Cupola Operator, in a mandatory area where
supervisors were present, also wearing his respirator with both straps around
his neck. Evans discussed her observation with Nicol, who was with her, but
noticed no corrective action. (Tr. 154-55).
(h)
Evans saw a millwright working in a mandatory area with his respirator straps up
over his hard hat. Evans testified that the union safety representative told
her that when respirators were fit-tested, employees did not wear hard hats.
Evans also testified that to achieve an adequate seal, respirators must be worn
the same way they were when fit-tested. Supervisors, including Nicol, were in
the area when Evans saw the employee, and Evans discussed the matter with
Nicol. (Tr. 154-56).
Gunite
presented no evidence that employees were ever disciplined for misuse of
respirators, and the Secretary notes that the two Kemper reports in 1997
pointed out to management that its respirator policy was not being strictly
enforced. (CX-9-10). However, Gunite contends the standard is not applicable
because none of the employees Evans observed were shown to have been exposed to
any toxic substance to a degree that would have required use of respiratory
gear under any OSHA standard. It cites to Gulf Oil Corp., 11 BNA OSHC
1476, 1480 (No. 76-5014, 1983), in which the Commission held that a hazard
requiring the use of respirators must be shown before an employer is required
to comply with the standard’s training requirement. In reaching its decision,
the Commission noted that there was no showing that exposure to dust at the
monitored levels was hazardous to employees or that employees had become ill as
a result of exposure. In this case, the record shows that employees in various
parts of the foundry were exposed to impermissibly high levels of respirable
silica and that employees had contracted silicosis. The record also shows
Gunite knew of the silica hazard and chose to address it with respirators
rather than engineering controls. That the Secretary has not established that
each cited incident subjected employees to overexposure is not determinative.
The standard’s objective is to protect employees from occupational diseases
caused by breathing harmful dusts, and this objective is largely unachievable
if the standard applies only to employees demonstrated to have been
overexposed. I find the standard to be applicable.
In
regard to instance (e), Gunite notes that the employees who placed their
respirators on their hard hats after leaving the foundry may not have reentered
wearing the same respirators since they were disposable and provided free of
charge by Gunite. While this could be true in some instances, the testimony of
Evans shows that the practice continued over the approximately five months that
she conducted her inspection and after she had reported it to management. In
any case, the citation alleges the failure to inspect and enforce proper
respirator use, not the failure to use them properly. I find that Gunite failed
to conduct frequent random inspections to assure that respirators were used
properly, that management was aware of this fact, and that employee misuse of
respirators created a hazard of exposure to silica at unhealthy levels. This
item is accordingly affirmed.
Classification and Penalty
The
Secretary urges the violation was willful for the following reasons: (1) Evans
observed no change in respirator misuse, even though she discussed the
instances with management; (2) the misuse was in plain view in areas where
supervisors were present; and (3) management ignored the statements in the 1997
Kemper reports that respirator requirements were not being enforced. In support
of her position, the Secretary cites to Calang Corp., 14 BNA OSHC 1789
(No. 85-319, 1990), in which the Commission held that an employer’s persistence
in a course of action after an OSHA CO specifically warned it that it was
violating the OSHA standards constituted willfulness. The Secretary determined
the probability in regard to this item as lesser and the severity as high
because silicosis could have resulted. The penalty proposed for this item is
$55,000.
Having
considered the classification and the penalty factors set out supra, I
conclude that Gunite’s continued failure to take steps to assure respirators
were being used properly after instances of misuse were brought to its attention
renders the violation willful. Because excessive silica exposure can lead to
silicosis, and in light of Gunite’s lengthy reliance on respirators to protect
foundry employees, I find the severity to be high. However, because there is no
evidence that failure to enforce proper respiratory use led to damaged
respirators or overexposure of employees, I find the probability to be lesser,
even though the number of employees affected was large. Under these
circumstances, I conclude that a $25,000 penalty is appropriate.
Sand Accumulation in the Basement - 29 C.F.R.
1910.22(a)(1)
In
Docket No. 98-1986, Citation 2, Item 1, alleges that sand buildup in the
basement along the 31 belt conveyor obstructed egress in the aisle by the
conveyor, in willful violation of 29 C.F.R. 1910.22(a)(1). The cited standard
provides as follows:
(a) Housekeeping. (1) All places of
employment, passageways, storerooms, and service rooms shall be kept clean and
orderly and in a sanitary condition.
The
cited belt runs 200 feet horizontally between the sand cooler and the sand
plant through the basement, an open area below the level of the main floor.
Sand is collected in the basement for recycling. The only machinery in the
basement is the conveyor belt and its drive mechanism, and the only employees
who work in the basement are those cleaning up the sand and technicians
performing occasional maintenance work. The basement is reached by a series of
steps and landings in a passageway about 5 feet wide that parallels the
conveyor. (Tr. 387, 391-93, 402, 424-28; RX- 40).
On
June 3, 1998, SHS Newquist inspected the basement area and found sand
accumulations as high as 3 to 5 feet. He testified that drifts and
accumulations made it difficult to walk down the length of the conveyor without
tripping and that someone tripping could fall, hit the conveyor and be
seriously cut or knocked unconscious. (Tr. 386-88, 393, 409). Based upon his
conversations with two foremen, as well as an employee complaint or suggestion
he became aware of, he concluded that the condition had persisted since
November of 1997. He also concluded that the four employees currently assigned
to sand removal in the basement were “just keeping up” with the incoming sand.
(Tr. 389-95, 410-11). Newquist had found the basement clear of sand on a visit
in 1986 and believed the accumulations, which management acknowledged to him to
be at their highest ever, were due to failure to assign adequate personnel to
clean up. He also testified that Nicol and Mark Vuletich, Gunite’s plant
manager, had declined to accompany him to the basement because they considered
it unsafe; however, Nicol and Gary Ingram, the union representative who had
also been present, denied that this was the case. (Tr. 390, 395-97, 418, 721).
Gunite
asserts the large accumulation of sand in the basement was abnormal and due to
three unusual events. The first was the failure of both a conveyor belt and the
backup system, which buried the basement in sand. The next was around January
1998, when part of the foundry roof collapsed during a heavy rain. This caused
the basement to flood and the sand to turn into mud, rendering the sand-sucker
vacuums useless and requiring sand to be removed manually. Third, sand removal
ceased during a three to four week strike in April, although production and
accumulation continued. (Tr. 87, 486-88, 501-05). Newquist was aware of these
events but apparently gave them scant consideration, since he knew little about
the belt breakdown or the foundry’s rate of sand usage, and he was silent about
the difficulty of removing wet sand. (Tr. 394, 398-99, 406-07, 413). He also
testified that no additional employees had been assigned to clean up since
January, contrary to Vuletich’s testimony regarding higher current staffing
levels and substantial manpower commitments following the roof collapse. (Tr.
404, 488, 502). I find dubious the opinion of Newquist that sand accumulations
posed a hazard as far back as November 1997, when an unspecified employee complaint
or suggestion led him to believe there were accumulations of 8 to 12 inches.
(Tr. 392). Similarly, I find unreliable his assessment that sand removal was
“just keeping even,” as it was based solely on his brief (20 to 25 minute)
visit without any additional information. (Tr. 412).
Newquist’s
uncontradicted testimony regarding the depth of accumulations on June 3, 1998,
the video he took, and management’s comments conceding accumulations were
unacceptably high establish that the basement passageway was not kept clean and
orderly as required. The technicians who went to the basement to inspect
equipment, as well as the employees using the sand suckers, were exposed to a
tripping hazard. (Tr. 392). Management was obviously aware of the problem and
endeavoring to rectify it. While I find it was not shown that Gunite was doing
nothing more than keeping pace with incoming sand, there is no evidence the
sand would have been brought to a safe level in the foreseeable future. (Tr.
502-03). The Secretary has established the alleged violation.
Classification and Penalty
The
Secretary maintains the violation was willful because the duration of the
hazard and Gunite’s failure to assign sufficient employees to clean it up
exhibit plain indifference. (Tr. 404-05). Two supervisors told Newquist that
past accumulations had been cleaned up by assigning eight to ten workers on the
weekend and three to four a shift. (Tr. 394-95, 404-07). However, neither of
the supervisors testified, and Newquist’s summarization of their comments left
unresolved when he understood the policy to have changed. In addition, Vuletich
testified that after the roof collapse, employees had worked extra shifts,
including weekends, to remove sand. (Tr. 488). Finally, while the Secretary
points out that Gunite was cited for violating the same standard in 1993, I
note that that citation was not for sand accumulations but for storing boxes on
a stairway. (Tr. 393, CX-43). I find that the Secretary has not demonstrated
that the violation was willful.
The
parties have stipulated that, absent a finding of willfulness, the violation
was serious. (JX-1). Newquist testified that the severity of the violation was
medium, in that an employee could have fallen against the conveyor and been cut
or knocked unconscious, and that the probability was greater, due to noise,
unguarded machinery, poor lighting and blowing sand. (Tr. 393, 402, 412). I
find the likelihood of anyone falling against the conveyor and sustaining a
serious injury to be small. Taking this factor and the other penalty factors
into consideration, and in view of the few employees exposed, the short
duration of exposure and the impossibility of removing the sand without at
least some exposure to the hazard, I conclude that a penalty of $4,000 is
appropriate for this item.
Sand on Platforms, Stairs and Rafters - 29 C.F.R.
1910.141(a)(3)(i)
In
Docket No. 98-1987, Citation 1, Item 6, alleges that throughout the foundry and
cleaning room, silica sand had settled on platforms, stairs and rafters, in
serious violation of 29 C.F.R. 141(a)(3)(i), which requires all places of
employment to be kept clean to the extent the work allows.
IH
Evans described the accumulations of sand and dust on floors, platforms, stairs,
railings, fans and computer workbenches that she observed and photographed.
(Tr. 28-34; CX-48, CX-52, CX-81-84). Evans testified that sand and dust on such
surfaces, particularly rafters, become airborne when disturbed. She noted that
this had actually occurred on June 18, 1998, when wind coming in from outside
had caused the sand and dust on the rafters to became airborne, reducing
visibility to roughly a foot and forcing her to stand still. (Tr. 34). Evans
also testified that Vuletich told her that employees had been hired to do
housekeeping work in the past but that those positions had been left vacant.
(Tr. 36). IH Evans considered the sand accumulations hazardous because the sand
contained silica, a toxic material that can cause silicosis. (Tr. 37-38,
237-40).
Gunite
contends that the cited standard is inapplicable because it does not purport to
regulate toxic materials such as silica, but, rather, hazards created by
unsanitary conditions. Section 141, entitled “Sanitation,” defines “toxic
material” as a material in concentration or amount that exceeds the applicable
limit established by a standard, such as sections 1910.1000 and 1910.1001. The
term is used twice more in the standard, once in (e), which relates to changing
rooms, and once in (g)(2), which relates to eating and drinking areas. The
parties have cited no legal authority for their positions and I have found no
reported cases in which the standard has been applied to hazards similar to the
one in this case; instead, the cases addressing the standard have to do with
issues such as lack of potable water or inadequate lavatory facilities. In
addition, I note that the regulations enacted for asbestos and lead included
specific housekeeping provisions rather than leaving this matter to a general
regulation such as the one cited here. I conclude that section 141(a)(i)
protects against the hazards of excessive accumulations of dust and sand, but
not against those which are hazardous only because they contain silica. The
Secretary has shown that sand and dust accumulations on rafters and other
surfaces can be hazardous when they become airborne and impair vision and
movement.
Gunite
also contends the standard of cleanliness, i.e., the level of acceptable
accumulations, was too subjective to inform it of what was required for
compliance. IH Evans testified that in a foundry, she expects rafters not to
contain settled-out dust, platforms to be sufficiently clear so that sand or
dust does not “rain down” on lower levels, and working surfaces to be cleaned
on a regular basis. (Tr. 37, 234-35). No evidence was presented to show these
expectations were unreasonable, and I found Evans to be experienced,
well-informed and credible. I also found her testimony about what occurred on
June 18, 1998, to be particularly telling as to the amount of sand and dust
accumulations in the foundry. I conclude that Gunite was in violation of the
cited standard, and that, in light of the obvious nature of the condition and
the fact that Gunite had employed workers to do housekeeping in the past,
employer knowledge is established. This citation item is affirmed.
Classification and Penalty
There
is no evidence that death or serious physical harm was a substantially probable
result of the violation, and I find that it was not serious. However, because
there is a direct and immediate relationship between the cited condition and
occupational safety and health, the violation is properly classified as
non-serious. Although many foundry workers were exposed to the hazard, there is
no evidence that any resulting injuries would be more than minor. I find the
gravity of the violation to be low and conclude that a penalty of $1,000 is
appropriate.
Audiograms - 29 C.F.R. 1910.95(g)(6)
In
Docket No. 98-1987, Citation 2, Item 1, alleges that Gunite did not obtain new
audiograms annually for five employees who were exposed to noise at or above an
8-hour time-weighted average of 85 decibels (“dBA”), in willful violation of 29
C.F.R. 1910.95(g)(6), which provides as follows:
Annual audiogram. At least annually after obtaining the baseline
audiogram, the employer shall obtain a new audiogram for each employee exposed
at or above an 8-hour time-weighted average of 85 decibels.
CO
Cantu testified that on June 3 and June 9, 1998, she monitored Gunite foundry
employees for exposure to noise and found the following five employees’
exposures to exceed the 85-dBA threshold and the 90-dBA PEL: Ralph Alvoid,
Quality Control Inspector, 92.2 dBA; Eric Robertson, Metal Pourer, 91.2 dBA;
David Upton, Metal Pourer, 90.1 dBA; Jerol Shanklin, BCP Flip Operator, 98.7
dBA; and Robert Marks, Paint Line Operator, 94.9 dBA. (Tr. 269-70; CX-20).
Testing Milosch did of Alvoid, Shanklin and Marks around the same time showed
nearly identical results. (CX-12). Based on her review of Gunite’s records,
Cantu testified that audiograms for the five employees were administered on the
following dates: Alvoid, July 30, 1992; Robertson, August 21, 1990; Upton,
December 1975; Shanklin, June 12, 1992; and Marks, August 1, 1975. Cantu
further testified that Gunite records showed that the five employees had not
been tested as required in the following years: Alvoid, 1997; Robertson, 1997;
Upton, 1974-84, 1988, 1990, 1997; Shanklin, 1997; and Marks, 1976-84, 1987-88,
1990, 1997. (Tr. 276-77; RX-28-30, RX-32-34).
Numerous
internal memos and notes in 1996, 1997 and 1998 show that Gunite knew that
supervisors were not assuring that employees were scheduled for audiograms and
that some employees failed to receive them. (Tr. 280; CX-28, CX-30, CX-33-41).
For example, 1996 memos sent to management reported that maintenance employees
were not being tested. (CX-28, CX-30). Kemper reports in 1996, 1997 and 1998
noted that employees were being exposed to noise in excess of the PEL.
(CX-7-11). CO Cantu testified that when annual audiograms are not administered,
hearing loss can go undetected and unaddressed, which can lead to possible
permanent hearing loss. (Tr. 279-83). Gunite had a hearing conservation program
for the foundry and acknowledges that it had known of the standard for several
years. (Tr. 272-74, 279).
Gunite
maintains the citation should be vacated because it was issued for violations
that had been corrected before or during the OSHA inspection. It reasons that
since the five employees received audiograms between January and July 1998, the
failure to administer annual audiograms in earlier years had been corrected.
(Tr. 287-92; RX-28-30, RX-32-34). However, the Commission precedent Gunite
cites supports a different conclusion. In Kaspar Wire Works, Inc., 13
BNA OSHC 1261, 1262 (No. 85-1060, 1987), the Commission held that OSHA may cite
a violation occurring more than six months earlier (the limitation period imposed
by section 9(c) of the Act) unless it reasonably should have discovered the
violation earlier. See also, General Dynamics Corp., Electric Boat
Div., 15 BNA OSHC 2122, 2128-29 (No. 87-1195, 1993). Gunite advances no
reason why OSHA should have discovered the violation any earlier. Gunite’s
argument is rejected, and I find that the Secretary has demonstrated a
violation of the cited standard.
Classification and Penalty
The
Secretary alleges the violation was willful and proposes a penalty of $55, 000.
She urges that internal memos and the Kemper reports demonstrate either a
general indifference to the hazard or a choice not to remedy it. She also
points to the numerous years that Upton and Marks had not received audiograms.
Gunite, on the other hand, notes the five employees all received audiograms in
1998 and 1999. (Tr. 287-93). It also points out that four of the five employees
wore ear protection and were not actually exposed to the levels measured. (Tr.
297-98). Finally, Gunite notes that OSHA’s comprehensive investigation led to
no other hearing-related citations. (Tr. 299-300).
When
management knew of a violation and could have corrected it, but did not, the
violation is willful. Caterpillar, Inc. v. Herman, 154 F.3d 400, 402 (7th
Cir. 1998); Great Lakes Packaging Corp., 18 BNA OSHC 2138, 2142, 2145
(No. 97-2030, 2000). There is no convincing evidence here that in 1997
management actually knew of and disregarded evidence that employees were not
receiving annual audiograms. Only two of the internal memos were prepared in
1997, both appear to be internal records of Gunite’s Health Services, and
neither shows copies went to management. (CX-31-32). Those prepared in prior
years do not mention Upton or Marks, the two employees who missed testing in
more than one year, and memos sent to management in 1998 arguably demonstrate
that full compliance was achieved that year. The two 1997 Kemper reports show
that employees other than those described in the citation were overexposed to
noise, and they gave no indication that employees were not receiving
audiograms. Those same reports also state that employees were then required to
wear hearing protection. (CX-9-10). The evidence in this case does not
establish that Gunite’s management acted with intentional disregard of the
standard or with plain indifference to employee safety. The Secretary has
therefore not shown the violation was willful, and, in accordance with the
parties’ stipulation, the violation was serious. (JX-1).
The
Secretary’s proposed penalty is based on an assessment of the severity as
medium and the probability as greater because of the number of employees not
receiving annual audiograms. However, the Secretary did not consider the ear
protection worn by four of the five employees, which I find lessens the
probability and the severity of any injury. I also find it relevant that of all
the foundry employees, only five were not tested annually and three of them
went untested for only one year. Further, there was no evidence presented of
any other deficiencies in Gunite’s hearing protection program that would
increase the importance of annual testing. Considering this information and the
other factors relevant to penalty determination, I conclude that the gravity of
the violation is medium to low and that a $5,000 penalty is appropriate.
FINDINGS
OF FACT
The
foregoing constitutes my findings of fact in accordance with Federal Rule of
Civil Procedure 52(a). Any proposed findings of fact inconsistent with this
decision are hereby denied.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
1.
The Commission has jurisdiction of this matter pursuant to section 10(c) of the
Act.
2.
Gunite was in willful violation of 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.1000(c)and (e), and
penalties of $20,000 and $40,000 are appropriate.
3.
Gunite was in serious violation of 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.1000(c) and (e), and a
penalty of $7,000 is appropriate.
4.
Gunite was in willful violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.134(e)(4), and a penalty of
$25,000 is appropriate.
5.
Gunite was in serious violation of 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.22(a)(1) and
1910.95(g)(6), and penalties of $4,000 and $5,000, respectively, are
appropriate.
6.
Gunite was non-serious violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.141(a)(3)(i), and a
penalty of $1,000 is appropriate.
ORDER
On
the basis of the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is
ordered that:
1.
In Docket No. 98-1986, Item 1 of Citation 2 is affirmed as a serious violation,
and a penalty of $4,000 is assessed.
2.
In Docket No. 98-1987, Item 6 of Citation 1 is affirmed as a non-serious
violation, and a penalty of $1,000 is assessed.
3.
In Docket No. 98-1987, Item 8 of Citation 1 is affirmed as serious violation,
and a penalty of $7,000 is assessed.
4.
In Docket No. 98-1987, Item 1 of Citation 2 is affirmed as a serious violation,
and a penalty of $5,000 is assessed.
5.
In Docket No. 98-1987, Items 2, 3 and 4 of Citation 2 are affirmed as willful
violations, and penalties of $25,000, $20,000 and $40,000, respectively, are
assessed.
/s/
Ann
Z. Cook
Judge,
OSHRC
Dated: November 13, 2000
Washington,
D.C.