UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA
OCCUPATIONAL
SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
Complainant, |
v. |
SJ
LOUIS CONSTRUCTION OF TEXAS LTD, |
Respondent. |
DOCKET NO. 16-1220
Appearances:
Lindsay A. Wofford, U.S. Department of Labor,
Office of the Solicitor, Dallas, Texas
For
Complainant
John P. Dibiasi,
Esq. of Lewis, Dibiasi, Zaita
& Higgins, Saddle River, New Jersey
For
Respondent
Before: Administrative Law Judge
Brian A. Duncan
DECISION AND ORDER
Procedural History
As
he was driving along a public roadway, Compliance Safety and Health Officer
Matthew Hoover noticed an open excavation at the intersection of Cypress Creek
Bend Drive & Tuckerton Road in Cypress, Texas, which he stopped to inspect
pursuant to Complainant’s National Emphasis Program on trenching. (Tr.
37). When he arrived at Respondent’s
worksite, he observed Rubin Calzada, Respondent’s
foreman, standing at the edge of the excavation and looking down upon two
employees, who were installing cathode wires to previously installed water
mains. Those wires prevent the creation
of corrosive environments for the pipe. (Tr. 61, 190). Based on CSHO Hoover’s observations, he
concluded that Respondent committed three violations of the trenching and
excavation standards found at Subpart P.
These violations included a failure to provide proper ingress/egress
from the trench and failure to provide adequate means of protection against
cave-ins. See Citation and
Notification of Penalty.
Complainant
issued a Citation and Notification of Penalty, alleging three separate
violations of the Occupational Safety and Health Act. Id. Respondent filed a
timely notice of contest, arguing that both the means of egress and the walls
of the trench were compliant with the cited standards. This brought the matter before the
Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission pursuant to Section 10(c) of
the Act. Prior to trial, Complainant
withdrew Citation 1, Item 2, leaving only two citation items for the Court’s
review. (Tr. 19–20). With Citation 1,
Item 2 thus withdrawn, the total penalty proposed by Complainant is $45,100.
This
matter was originally assigned to Judge John Schumacher, who is no longer with the
Commission. On December 15, 2017, the case was re-assigned, and a trial was
held on June 22, 2018 in Houston, Texas.
Two witnesses testified at trial: (1) CSHO Matthew Hoover, and (2) Lucus Menebroker, Respondent’s Vice
President and Area Manager. Both parties submitted post-trial briefs for the
Court’s consideration.
Jurisdiction & Stipulations
The
parties stipulated the Commission has jurisdiction over this proceeding
pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act and
that, at all times relevant to this proceeding, Respondent
was an employer engaged in a business and industry affecting interstate
commerce within the meaning of Sections 3(3) and 3(5) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. §
652(5). (Tr. 18–19). See Slingluff v. OSHRC,
425 F.3d 861 (10th Cir. 2005). The
parties also stipulated to other factual matters, which were read into the
record. (Tr. 18–19).
Factual Background
Respondent
is a large underground utilities contractor. On the day of CSHO Hoover’s
inspection, one of Respondent’s crews was in the process of installing cathode
wires to a section of water main that it had previously installed as part of a
larger project for the West Harris County Regional Water Authority. (Tr. 61, 166–67). As noted earlier, CSHO Hoover observed two of
Respondent’s employees working in the bottom of a trench that had no immediately
visible signs of protection installed and appeared to be lacking an adequate
means of ingress/egress. (Tr. 37, 42; Ex. C-1 at 1 to 3). Calzada directed
the employees to exit the trench after CSHO Hoover arrived. (Tr. 93; Ex. C-1 at
3).
Calzada told CSHO Hoover he opted not to use the available trench
box because certain structural pins for the box did not fit or match up
correctly. (Tr. 62). Instead, Calzada opted to use the benching method memorialized in an
engineer-approved plan for this project. (Stip. No. 8; Tr. 65–66).[1] The engineer-approved plan provided two
options for its implementation:
Option I The Contractor can use Slope as shown
in the Option I section of the specification.
Applicable slopes may be obtained by either
straight cut or benched method. Vertical cuts for the benched method shall
not exceed four (4) feet. Easement
restrictions may limit the use of this option. See Drawing Option I.
Option II The Contractor may use a Trench Shield as shown in the
Option II section of this specification. Requirements set forth in in this
Option shall include curricular trench shield(s) and or manhole boxes. All slopes above trench shield(s) shall
conform to the guidelines set forth in Option I.
(Ex. R-8 at 8)
(emphasis added). This set of options is
similar to the way Subpart P provides employers the
option to utilize sloping/benching or to use physical implements, such as
shoring, to protect against cave-ins. (Ex. R-8). See generally 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652. Because no functional shoring was available, Calzada opted to use Option I. (Tr. 62).
According to CSHO Hoover, Calzada told him that they had benched and sloped the
excavation to a horizontal-vertical (H/V) ratio of one to four, which more or less aligns with CSHO Hoover’s estimate of the height
of the benches versus their width.[2]
(Tr. 63). Calzada
also told CSHO Hoover that he did not take any measurements of the benching or
sloping and that the job was supposed to be a quick in-and-out operation,
lasting approximately 15 minutes. (Tr. 63).
Based on his measurements, CSHO Hoover determined Respondent’s trench
was not in compliance. The trench itself
measured 20-feet long, 12-feet wide across at the top, and was approximately 7
feet deep.[3]
(Tr. 47, 52–53, 75; Ex. C-11). As
illustrated in Exhibit C-1, the trench also had benches along either side of
the excavation that started roughly half-way up the wall, thus measuring
approximately 3 to 3.5 feet in height. (Tr. 49; Ex. C-1 at 1). According to Hoover, the bench running along
the right-hand side of the excavation (indicated by an “R” on C-1) was roughly
two-feet wide, though it did have a substantial portion of the bench missing
roughly half-way down the length of the trench.[4] (Tr.
83; Ex. C-1 at 1). The left-hand side
had a bench of sorts; however, as indicated by CSHO Hoover, the bench varied in
width throughout the length of the trench and was never more than one-foot
wide. (Tr. 54; Ex. C-1 at 1). Further,
according to Hoover, the left-side bench wall slope measured 60 degrees, and
the sloped wall opposite the excavator measured 50 degrees. (Tr. 49, 57; Ex. C-11
at 4, 8, 12 and 13). CSHO Hoover did not
measure the slope of the wall beneath the excavator because he did not feel
safe performing the measurement. (Tr. 50–51).
In addition to the alleged
slope-related deficiencies, CSHO Hoover also determined the trench did not have
an adequate means of ingress/egress. (Tr. 94).
After arriving at the site, CSHO Hoover observed two employees exit from
the trench at a point adjacent to the wall where the excavator was parked. (Ex.
C-1 at 3). To exit the trench, the
employees walked toward the excavator and began walking up the sloped portion
of that wall. (Tr. 93). Then, they
turned to the right wall of the trench and crawled onto the bench while using
the trench wall as a handhold. (Tr. 94; Ex. C-1 at 3). CSHO Hoover determined this was a violation
based on the impediment posed by the excavator and the roughly
three-and-a-half-foot step they had to take onto and off the bench in order to
fully exit the trench. (Tr. 94; Ex. C-1 at 3).
After
the inspection, CSHO Hoover proposed, and Complainant approved, the issuance of
a Citation and Notification of Penalty, alleging three separate violations of
the Act. As noted above, Complainant withdrew Citation 1, Item 2, which leaves the
two citation items discussed below.
Discussion
Complainant
alleged a serious violation of the Act in Citation 1, Item 1 as follows:
29 CFR 1926.651(c)(2): A stairway, ladder, ramp or other safe means
of egress was not located in trench excavations that were more than 4 feet
(1.22m) or more in depth so as to require no more than
25 feet (7.62m) of lateral travel for employees.
On or about
March 3, 2016, near the intersection of Cypress Creek Bend Dr. and Tuckerton
Rd., where employees were exposed to fall hazards when entering and exiting the
eight foot deep excavation without utilizing a
stairway, ladder, ramp, or other safe means of egress.
Citation and Notification of Penalty at 6.
The Standard Applied and Was Violated
Respondent
concedes that 1926.651(c)(2) applied to the trench at issue. See Resp’t Br.
at 11. The primary issue with respect to
this alleged violation is whether Respondent installed or otherwise constructed
a safe means of ingress/egress from the trench.
Based on the evidence introduced by the only witness that personally
observed the trench and the manner in which
Respondent’s employees exited from it, the Court finds Respondent failed to
ensure a safe means of ingress/egress from the trench. The cited standard requires a ladder,
stairway, ramp, or other safe means of egress. Because there was no ladder or stairway, the
question remains as to whether Respondent provided a ramp or other safe means
of egress. It did neither.
First, Respondent contends the exit
path taken by Respondent’s employees was, in fact, a ‘ramp’ as defined by
Subpart P. See 29 C.F.R. §
1926.651(c)(2). A ramp “means an
inclined walking or working surface that is used to gain access from one point
from another, and is constructed from earth or from structural materials . . . .” Id. Whatever Respondent prefers to call the path
Respondent’s employees crawled up to exit the trench, it is surely not a
ramp. To exit the trench, the employees
first moved up the slope towards the side of the trench occupied by the
excavator. (Tr. 93–94; Ex. C-1 at 3). Just
a couple of feet up the slope, the employees then turned to their right to step
up onto the bench on the right-hand side of the trench. (Id.). From there, the
employees used their hands to push or pull themselves up the remaining
three-plus foot wall to exit. (Id.). This “pathway” as Menebroker
referred to it, is little more than an afterthought and certainly not an
intentional surface designed to facilitate access from one point to another. (Tr.
197–98). Contrary to Respondent’s assertion, the standard does not “merely”
require a ramp, but one that was clearly designed as such and provides a safe
means of egress. Respondent’s employees
used multiple surfaces and means to climb out of the trench, none of which
qualify, either individually or in tandem, as a ramp.
Nor, for that matter, was the pathway
used by Respondent’s employees a safe means of egress, as the phrase is
employed under the cited standard. As
observed by CSHO Hoover, the employees exited in the direction of the
excavator, which, as depicted in Exhibit C-1, was parked at the far edge of the
trench. (Ex. C-1 at 3). Respondent’s own
trench safety policy states, “No spoil or equipment shall be permitted nearer
than 2 feet from the edge of the excavation.” (Ex. R-8 at 9). As the photographic evidence illustrates,
however, the excavator was parked at the precipice of the trench’s far edge.
(Ex. C-1 at 3). Thus, not only were
additional loads imposed on that portion of the trench wall, but any reasonable
and prompt means of escape were blocked by the excavator. See, e.g., 29 C.F.R. § 1926.651(j)(2) (requiring material and
equipment to be placed at least 2 feet from edge of excavation). See
Degen Excavating, Inc., 22 BNA OSHC 1904 (No. 08-1271, 2009) (ALJ) (“While
Robey and Maxwell may believe that Maxwell had no trouble exiting the trench,
the photo demonstrates this was more likely due to Maxwell’s dexterity than the
suitability of the means of exit. Indeed, in the event of a collapse, it is
very possible the bank Maxwell was required to climb could have been adversely
affected.”).
By way of comparison, the Court
reviewed the maximum allowable distances between the steps of a ladder, which
is an acceptable (and explicitly provided) means of providing safe egress under
the standard. The maximum allowable distance
between ladder rungs (10 to 14 inches) is less than half of the vertical
distance Respondent’s employees had to climb in order to exit the trench. See 29 C.F.R. §§ 1926.1053(a)(3)(i); see also 29
C.F.R. § 1926.1051(a) (“A stairway or ladder shall be provided at all personnel
points of access where there is a break in elevation of 19 inches (48 cm) or
more, and no ramp, runway, sloped embankment, or personnel hoist is provided.”). Further complicating matters was the fact
that the trench exhibited signs of sloughing and failure. Though Menebroker
attempted to characterize the area of failure as an intentional “notch” used to
facilitate ingress/egress, his characterization is rejected as not credible for
three reasons: (1) the employees did not use the alleged “notch” when they
actually exited the trench; (2) Menebroker did not
personally observe the trench or the conditions at the worksite; and (3) his
testimony appeared to be post-citation speculation as to a possible explanation
for the collapsed portion of the bench. (Tr. 196, 219–220; Ex. C-1, p.1). The Court finds there was no safe means of
egress at the time of the inspection.
The requirements of the standard were violated.
Respondent’s Employees Were Exposed
to the Hazard
To
establish exposure under Commission precedent, the Secretary must show
Respondent’s employees were actually exposed to the
violative condition or that it is “reasonably predictable by operational
necessity or otherwise (including inadvertence), that employees have been, are,
or will be in the zone of danger.” Fabricated
Metal Prods., 18 BNA OSHC 1072, 1074 (No. 93-1853, 1997). See Oberdorfer
Industries, Inc., 20 BNA OSHC 1321 (“The zone of danger is determined by
the hazards presented by the violative condition that presents the danger to
employees which the standard is designed to prevent.”). The photographs show Respondent’s employees in
the trench, then actually using an unsafe means to exit the trench, thereby
exposing them to potential slip and fall hazards, as well as potential cave-in
hazards imposed by the excavator. (Ex. C-1 at 3). Thus, Complainant established employee exposure.
Respondent Had Knowledge of the
Violation
To prove this element, Complainant
must show Respondent knew or, with the exercise of reasonable diligence, could
have known of the violation. Dun-Par
Engineered Form Co., 12 BNA OSHC 1962, 1965 (No. 82-928, 1986). The key is whether Respondent was aware of
the conditions constituting a violation, not whether it understood the
conditions violated the Act. Phoenix
Roofing, Inc., 17 BNA OSHC 1076, 1079–80 (No. 90-2148, 1995). Complainant can prove knowledge of a
corporate employer through the knowledge, actual or constructive, of its
supervisory employees. Dover Elevator Co.,
16 BNA OSHC 1281, 1286 (No. 91-862, 1993).
If a supervisor is, or should be, aware of the noncomplying conduct of a
subordinate, it is reasonable to charge the employer with that knowledge. See Mountain States
Tel. & Tel. Co. v. OSHRC, 623 F.2d 155, 158 (10th Cir. 1980).
As
with the previous element, Respondent’s knowledge of the violative conditions
is not in serious dispute. Calzada, Respondent’s
foreman, was standing at the edge of the trench watching them work in the
violative trench. Because Calzada was their supervisor, his knowledge is properly
imputed to Respondent. Accordingly, Complainant
established actual employer knowledge of the violation.
The
Violation Was Serious
A
violation is “serious” if there was a substantial probability that death or
serious physical harm could have resulted from the violative condition. 29
U.S.C. § 666(k). Complainant need not
show that there was a substantial probability that an accident would actually occur; he need only show that if an accident
occurred, serious physical harm could result.
Phelps Dodge Corp. v. OSHRC,
725 F.2d 1237, 1240 (9th Cir. 1984). If
the possible injury addressed by a regulation is death or serious physical
harm, a violation of the regulation is serious.
Mosser Construction, 23 BNA
OSHC 1044 (No. 08-0631, 2010); Dec-Tam
Corp., 15 BNA OSHC 2072 (No. 88-0523, 1993).
CSHO Hoover testified the lack of
proper egress from the trench exposed Respondent’s employees to slip and fall
hazards that could lead to broken bones and contusions. (Tr. 100). Further, as discussed in more detail below,
Respondent’s employees were exposed to crushing hazards imposed by an
improperly protected trench, thereby heightening the hazards imposed by the
lack of safe and prompt exit. Whether
due to falling into the trench or being crushed by a collapsing trench without
adequate egress, Respondent’s employees were exposed to the possibility of
serious injuries up to, and including, death.
Accordingly, the violation was properly characterized as serious.
Citation
2, Item 1
Complainant
alleged a repeat violation of the Act in Citation 1, Item 1 as follows:
29 CFR 1926.652(a)(1):
Each employee in an excavation was not protected from cave-ins by an
adequate protective system designed in accordance with 29 CFR 1926.652(b) or
(c).
On or about March 3, 2016, near the intersection of
Cypress Creek Bend Dr. and Tuckerton Rd., where employees were exposed to
crushed-by hazards without being protected when working in an excavation that
was 8 feet in depth that had no protective system.
S.J. LOUIS
CONSTRUCTION OF TEXAS WAS PREVIOUSLY CITED FOR A VIOLATION OF THIS OCCUPATIONAL
SAFETY AND HEALTH STANDARD, WHICH WAS CONTAINED IN OSHA INSPECTION NUMBER 316045335,
CITATION NUMBER 2, ITEM NUMBER 1 AND WAS AFFIRMED AS A FINAL ORDER ON NOVEMBER
8, 2012, WITH A FINAL ABATEMENT DATE OF JANUARY 8, 2013, WITH RESPECT A
WORKPLACE LOCATED AT 860 W. AIRPORT FRWY, HURST, TX 46054.
Citation and Notification of Penalty at 6.
The
Standard Applies and Was Violated
Respondent
was cited for violating 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652(a)(1), which is the general
requirement for protecting the occupants of a trench. As with the previous
citation item, Respondent does not dispute the applicability of the
standard. Instead, Respondent contends
that it procured, implemented, and followed a plan approved by a registered
professional engineer in accordance with 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652(b)(4). While Respondent may have procured a plan
designed by a professional engineer, the Court finds that it failed to abide by
the plan’s terms.
In
lieu of abiding by the standard-imposed requirements for trench protection, an
employer has the option to hire a professional engineer to design a plan that
will provide equivalent protection. See 29
C.F.R. § 1926.652(b)(4). Depending on
the type of protection used, the plan will be governed by 1926.652(b)(4) or
(c)(4), which address sloping/benching and support systems, respectively. In this case, Respondent’s plan appears to
comply with 1926.652(b)(4). However,
while the plan itself may be compliant, Respondent failed to adhere to its
terms.
To
recap, CSHO Hoover measured the slope of the walls as follows: (1) left wall, 60
degrees; and (3) wall opposite excavator, 50 degrees. CSHO Hoover did not measure the wall beneath
the excavator because he felt there was no safe way to do so. None of these
walls were compliant with the OSHA standard of 45 degrees (H:V ratio of 1:1)
for Type B soil. See 29 C.F.R. §
1926.652(b)(1)(ii); see also Pt.
1926, Subpt. P, App. B. Thus, we compare the trench measurements with
the allowable configurations under Respondent’s engineer-approved plan.
Respondent’s
plan provides two options: sloping or shielding. (Ex. R-8). Because Calzada did
not use the trench box, the only other available option is Option I – Sloping. (Ex.
R-8 at 9). According to the general
description of Option I, which governs the use of slope as a protective
measure, “Applicable slopes may be obtained by either straight cut or benched method.” (Ex. R-8 at 8) (emphasis
added). This point is clarified on the
following page, which includes a notation on the Option I diagram, stating,
“The contractor may use the benched
method of slope.” (Ex. R-8 at 9)
(emphasis added). In other words,
benching is simply another method by which the required slope can be attained,
which is consistent with the dictates and structure of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652.
As
an alternative to a pure application of either slope or benching, Option I allows for a single 3’6” vertical bench in “stiff clay.”[5] (Ex.
R-8 at 9). Nevertheless, the diagram
still indicates the remaining portion of the wall above 3’6” must be sloped or
benched according to the soil type and depth of the trench. (Id.).
The parties stipulated the trench was dug in Type B soil and was less
than 12-feet deep, which means that the maximum allowable slope, per the plan,
was 3/4:1 (H/V), or 53 degrees. (Tr. 19 at Stip. No. 9; Ex. R-8 at 9). Complainant maintains that, even when
applying the terms of Respondent’s engineer plan, at least one wall of the
excavation was not in compliance. The
Court agrees.
Utilizing
the somewhat vague parameters provided by the engineering plan, Respondent
attempts to argue the trench complied with the plan by cherry-picking certain
maximum and minimum measurements—including the single-bench option discussed
above—and suggesting that compliance with those is all that is required. (Tr. 182–83).
Menebroker testified
that Respondent did not have to comply with the overall 53
degree slope requirement in the engineering plan. He asserted that the plan allowed multiple
benches of 4 feet vertical for every 1 foot horizontal. Id;
R-8, p. 8, Section 5.2.3; see also Resp’t Br. at 17. What
Respondent disregards is that those maximum and minimum measurements are
restrictions within the overall scheme of a maximum 53 degree
slope to protect against cave-ins. Put
simply, if the required overall slope is not achieved, then the trench is not
compliant with the plan irrespective of whether the benches comply with the
mandatory minimum and maximum measurements for width and height.[6]
Because
the left wall exceeded the maximum allowable slope provided in both the
standard and the engineer-approved trench safety plan, as it was 60 degrees,
the Court finds Respondent violated 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652(a)(1).
Respondent’s
Employees Were Exposed and Respondent Had Knowledge
As
with Citation 1, Item 1, Respondent did not specifically dispute its employees
were exposed to a hazard or that it had knowledge of the violation. Both of its employees were working in the
bottom of the improperly protected trench for a period of roughly fifteen
minutes. This activity was observed and photographed by CSHO Hoover and clearly
illustrates exposure to the cave-in hazard. (Ex. C-1 at 1 to 3). Second, Calzada,
whom the Court has already found to be a supervisor, directly observed his
employees working inside the non-compliant trench. As supervisor, his knowledge is properly
imputed to Respondent. See Mountain
States Tel. & Tel. Co., 623 F.2d at 158. Accordingly, the Court finds Complainant
established a prima facie violation
of 29 C.F.R. § 1926.652(a)(1).
The
Violation was Properly Characterized as Repeat
According
to the Commission, “A violation is repeated under section 17(a) of the Act if,
at the time of the alleged repeat violation, there was a Commission final order
against the same employer for a substantially similar violation.” Potlatch Corp., 7 BNA OSHC 1061 (No.
16183, 1979). Though substantial
similarity can be shown in a number of ways,
Complainant can establish a prima facie case
of similarity “by showing that the prior and present violations are for failure
to comply with the same standard.” Id. The Commission noted “it may be difficult for
an employer to rebut” a showing of substantial similarity when the repeat
designation is based on violations of the same specific standard “because in
many instances the two violations must be substantially similar in nature to be
violations of the same standard.” Id. Respondent can rebut Complainant’s prima facie case of substantial
similarity by “evidence of the disparate conditions and hazards associated with
these violations of the same standard.” Id. However, this is more likely when a general,
performance-based standard is at issue, such as 29 C.F.R. § 1926.28(a). Id. at nn. 9
& 10.
Complainant
established Respondent had been previously cited for violating 29 C.F.R. §
1926.652(a)(1) on August 6, 2012, and the citation had become a final order of
the Commission in November 2012. (Exs. C-6,
C-7). In both instances Respondent’s
employees were exposed to cave-in hazards while they were working inside a
non-compliant trench. Compare Citation
and Notification of Penalty with Ex.
C-7. Although the relative size of the
trenches was different, the basic facts surrounding the employees’ exposure and
the plan governing trench protection were substantially similar: (1) the CSHO found employees inside the
trench; (2) the soil was Type B; (3) the trench was more than 5 feet deep; (4)
the bench method of slope was incorrectly applied; and (5) a site-specific
trench safety plan was utilized, albeit incorrectly. (Exs.
C-7, C-8). The Court rejects Respondent’s
claim that the differences in depth—7 feet in the current trench; 10 feet in
the previous citation—illustrate a “significant difference”. Accordingly, the
Court finds Complainant established that Citation 2, Item 1 was properly
characterized as a repeat violation.
Penalty
In
calculating appropriate penalties for affirmed violations, Section 17(j) of the
Act requires the Commission give due consideration to four criteria: (1) the
size of the employer’s business, (2) the gravity of the violation, (3) the good
faith of the employer, and (4) the employer’s prior history of violations. Gravity is the primary consideration and is
determined by the number of employees exposed, the duration of the exposure,
the precautions taken against injury, and the likelihood of an actual injury. J.A.
Jones Construction Co., 15 BNA OSHC 2201 (No. 87-2059, 1993). It is well established that the Commission
and its judges conduct de novo
penalty determinations and have full discretion to assess penalties based on
the facts of each case and the applicable statutory criteria. Valdak Corp., 17
BNA OSHC 1135 (No. 93-0239, 1995); Allied
Structural Steel, 2 BNA OSHC 1457 (No. 1681, 1975).
Several
factors that are applicable to both Citation 1, Item 1, and Citation 2, Item 1,
such as number of employees, good faith, and history. Therefore, the Court agrees with Complainant’s
findings, if not his overall penalty assessment. Respondent has approximately 500 employees,
which Complainant considers to be a large company and, therefore, ineligible
for a size-based reduction in penalty. Complainant did not calculate any
reduction for good faith attempts to comply based on Respondent’s failure to
timely provide CSHO Hoover with documentation of a safety and health program
and evidence of training. Although
Respondent provided such material at trial and post-inspection, the Court finds
the general state of the trench and the labored interpretation of the trench
safety program provided by Menebroker indicate a lack
of attention to trench safety requirements.
As such, the Court finds, albeit for different reasons, that Respondent
did not exhibit good faith in this case.
Further, Respondent has been cited for serious violations in the
preceding five years, which Complainant used to increase the penalty by 10%
under the guise of poor compliance history.
The Court is not convinced that the existence of a single violation over
the previous five years, without additional explanation or evidence, is sufficient for an increase in the proposed penalty. (Tr. 118–19;
Ex. C-14). Further, Respondent’s history
has been adequately addressed through the “repeat” characterization of Citation
2, Item 1.
As
to Citation 1, Item 1, specifically, Complainant proposed a gravity-based
penalty of $6,000, which it increased by 10% for history, as discussed
above. Regarding gravity, Complainant
argued the violation presented a greater probability of occurring due to the ad hoc nature of the egress “ramp”, the
presence of sloughing on one of the benches, and the presence of the excavator
at the edge of the trench where employees exited. (Tr. 42, 117). That said, he also determined that the likely
injuries would be “reversible injuries with a limited period of disability” and
assessed the severity of the violation as medium. (Tr. 117). The Court finds the foregoing adequately
addresses both the conditions observed by CSHO Hoover and his assessment of the
violation’s gravity. Accordingly, the
Court adopts Complainant’s assessment of gravity and hereby imposes a penalty
of $6,000 for Citation 1, Item 1.
As
to Citation 2, Item 1, Complainant proposed a gravity-based penalty of
$7,000. This assessment was premised on CSHO
Hoover’s determination that the violation was of high severity and greater
probability. The Court agrees with both
assessments. The two employees occupied
a non-compliant trench, which was showing signs of failure, for approximately
15 minutes. (Tr. 63. In so doing, those
employees were exposed to cave-in hazards, which can cause severe contusions,
crushing injuries, and death. (Tr. 104).
In addition, Complainant applied a multiplier of five to the original
penalty based on Respondent’s size and the repeat nature of the violation.
Given that Respondent was cited for the exact same violation under
substantially similar conditions, the Court finds that the multiplier imposes
the necessary “pocketbook deterrence” and, hopefully, encourages “prospective
compliance”. See Joel Yandell d/b/a Triple L Tower, 18
BNA OSHC 1623 (No. 94-3080, 1999) (quoting Bae
v. Shalala, 44 F.3d 489, 494 (7th Cir. 1995)). Based on the totality of the circumstances discussed
above, the Court hereby assesses a penalty of $30,000.
Order
Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and
Conclusions of Law, it is ORDERED
that:
1. Citation 1, Item 1 is AFFIRMED as a serious
violation, and a penalty of $6,000 is ASSESSED; and
2. Citation 2, Item 1 is AFFIRMED as a
repeat violation, and a penalty of $30,000 is ASSESSED.
/s/
Brian A. Duncan |
Date: January 3, 2019 Judge Brian A. Duncan
Denver, Colorado U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission
[1]. Respondent did not provide CSHO Hoover with a copy of the engineering plan until after the inspection concluded and Hoover had returned to his office. (Tr. 64–65).
[2]. CSHO Hoover testified the slope was 4:1, but later clarified he was using the ratio of rise over run, or vertical to horizontal. (Tr. 63). The Court has expressed the ratio of horizontal to vertical, which is the way it is expressed in R-8 and Subpart P.
[3]. CSHO Hoover’s initial measurement of 8 feet was off by approximately one foot because he forgot to account for the angle of the trench rod, which he used to measure the trench. (Tr. 75).
[4]. The Court will continue to refer to the sides of the trench in this manner; however, for clarification, the Court notes the labels “right” and “left” are based on an individual looking lengthwise down the trench to the location of the excavator, which is also noted on Ex. C-1 at 1.
[5]. Respondent’s plan does not appear to define the term “stiff clay”. CSHO Hoover stated that this can refer to Type B soil, though he did not agree that the trench at issue was dug in stiff clay. (Tr. 130–31).
[6]. To further illustrate Respondent’s loose reading of the engineer’s excavation plan, multiple four-foot vertical to one-foot horizontal benches in a trench would result in an overall slope angle of approximately 75 degrees, or nearly vertical.