United States of America
OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH REVIEW
COMMISSION
SECRETARY
OF LABOR, |
Complainant, |
v. |
MANSFIELD
INDUSTRIAL, INC., |
Respondent. |
OSHRC Docket No. 17-0594
Appearances:
Felix Marquez, Esq.,
Department of Labor, Office of Solicitor, Dallas, Texas
For Complainant
Peter J. Gillespie, Esq., Laner
Muchin, Ltd., Chicago, Illinois
For Respondent
Before: Judge Patrick
B. Augustine – U. S. Administrative Law Judge
DECISION AND ORDER
I.
Procedural History
On October 5, 2016, a chlorine leak
occurred at the Formosa Plastics facility in Point Comfort, Texas (“Worksite”). (Tr. 57–58).
The leak caused six of Respondent’s employees to suffer respiratory
injuries requiring hospitalization. (Tr. 60–61). Consistent with its obligation under the Occupational
Safety Health Act of 1970, 29 U.S.C. § 651 et.
Seq. (“Act”), Respondent notified Complainant about the incident. (Tr. 60). In response, Complainant initiated a
Fatality/Catastrophe (FAT/CAT) investigation of Respondent and the Worksite.
(Tr. 57–58). As a
result of her inspection, Compliance Safety and Health Office (CSHO)
Hilda Argullin recommended, and Complainant issued, a
Citation and Notification of Penalty (“Citation”) alleging two violations of
the Act. The Citation alleges violations
related to training on hazardous materials and documentation requirements for
the use of respirators; and includes a proposed penalty of $12,675.[1] See 29 C.F.R. §§ 1910.1200(h)(1),
1910.134(f)(2). Respondent timely
contested the Citation.
The matter was designated for
Simplified Proceedings by the Chief Administrative Law Judge and assigned to the
Court on April 13, 2017. A trial was
held on February 20–21, 2018, in Houston, Texas, during which the following
individuals testified: (1) CSHO Hilda Argullin; (2)
CSHO Stephanie Dovalina; (3) Joseph Martinez,
Respondent’s on-site manager at Formosa; (4) Mike Lindsey, Director of
Environmental Safety and Health for K2 Industrial Services, Respondent’s
principal owner; and (5) Ryan Reyes, one of Respondent’s site foremen. In lieu
of closing on the record, both parties submitted timely post-trial briefs.
II.
Stipulations and Jurisdiction
The
parties stipulated to several facts, mostly jurisdictional. (Tr. 13–14). Those
stipulations were submitted by the parties as Joint Exhibit 1.[2] Based
on the parties’ stipulations, the Court finds the Commission has jurisdiction
over the action pursuant to Section 10(c) of the Act, 29 U.S.C. § 659(c). Further, the Court finds 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). Slingluff
v. OSHRC, 425 F.3d 861, 866–67 (10th Cir. 2005).
III.
Factual Background
Respondent was hired by Formosa
Plastics to remove rust from, and paint valves at its plastics facility in Point
Comfort, Texas. (Tr. 72, 176, 306). On
the date of the incident described above, Respondent had two crews working at
Formosa, both of which were supervised by Joseph Martinez. (Tr. 178). According to Martinez, his crews were working
in what is known as the 500 Unit of the facility, which processes chlorine.
(Tr. 180). The crew of employees
eventually injured by the chlorine leak began their day in the 500C Unit but
were soon transferred to the 500AB Unit. (Tr. 129, 175). Martinez testified the distance between 500C Unit
and the 500AB Unit was a matter of a “couple of feet”. (Tr. 176). Even though the hazards and chemicals were
still the same, Respondent still obtained a new work permit for the change in
location. (Tr. 177–78). The other crew
was in the IEM unit, which was located across a road that cut through the 500 Unit.
(Tr. 178).
Gilberto Santana[3]
identified a leak in one of the pipes in the 500AB Unit. (Tr. 293). At that time, it appeared only water was
coming out of the tube. (Tr. 293). In
response, Ryan Reyes notified Formosa’s operations department, who sent two employees
to the unit to identify the problem. (Tr. 294).
According to Reyes, the two Formosa employees agreed it was only a water
leak and one of the employees, Gilberto, asked Reyes for a set of channel locks
to crimp the tube in place and secure the leak. (Tr. 295). Reyes went to his truck, which was located 25
feet from the 500AB Unit, to retrieve the channel locks. (Tr. 295). It was not until he began his return trip
that Reyes noted the smell of chlorine. (Tr. 296). Reyes alerted the Formosa employee named
Tyler, who agreed he smelled chlorine.
Reyes also told Tyler his belt gas monitor was going off as well. (Tr. 296–97). At that time, Tyler directed Respondent’s
employees to the assembly point. (Tr. 297).
Reyes testified all employees in the 500AB Unit traveled with him to the
assembly point, except for Chris Zamora, who went across the road to the IEM
unit to notify the other crew because the alarm had not yet sounded.[4]
(Tr. 297–98). Eventually all of Respondent’s
employees were evacuated from the Worksite, though the entire crew in the 500AB
Unit, including Zamora, had to be taken to the hospital due to their exposure
to chlorine. (Tr. 300). No one in the
IEM unit was injured. (Tr. 278).
Though it was not known at the time,
the chlorine leak did not originate at the place where the water leak occurred.
(Tr. 226–27). According to Lindsey, the drop-in
water level prevented the system from being able to contain the chlorine,
which, in turn, caused the leak. (Tr. 276).
During a chemical release, employees are trained to move up- and
cross-wind from the identified leak, which is aided by the placement of wind
socks throughout the plant. (Tr. 292).
Unfortunately for the crew in the 500AB Unit, the chlorine leak did not
originate from the same location as the water leak; rather, it emanated from
the p-trap, which happened to be along their route to the assembly point. (Tr. 226–27). The source of the leak was not identified
until Formosa was able to conduct an after-the-fact investigation of the
incident. (Tr. 227, 276–78).
As a prerequisite to being allowed
onto the Worksite, Respondent’s employees had to be trained on the chemicals
and other hazards to which they could potentially be exposed. (Tr. 95–97). Formosa did not facilitate the training;
rather, it provided Respondent with the basic information, along with testing
materials, and required that all entrants onto the Worksite pass the associated
examination. (Tr. 91, 96; Ex. C-18). According to the record evidence, all of
Respondent’s employees passed the English-only exam without missing a question.
(Tr. 94; Ex. C-18). This was so even
though one of Respondent’s employees, Lara, was not fluent in English. (Tr. 97). However, according to Martinez and Lindsey,
Mr. Lara was an engaged learner who asked clarifying questions and was
supported by his son, Gilberto, who provided translation of the training and
examination materials. (Tr. 203, 250–52, 270–72).
After receiving the report of the hospitalization,
CSHOs Argullin and Dovalina
were dispatched to the Formosa plant, where they conducted interviews and a
walk-around inspection. During her interviews, CSHO Argullin
understood the evacuation process was chaotic and the employees went in all
directions rather than towards the assembly point, revealing to her that
training was insufficient. (Tr. 122).
Coupled with her determination that the quality of the training
assessment was suspect—considering the purported language issue mentioned above—CSHO
Argullin determined Respondent failed to provide
adequate training on hazardous materials.
Further, upon review of Respondent’s respirator records, CSHO Argullin found one employee, Adrian Galindo, did not have
an up-to-date fit test on record. Based on
these findings, she recommended, and the Occupational Safety Health
Administration (“OSHA”) issued, the citation items discussed in detail below.
IV.
Discussion
A. Law Applicable to Alleged Violations
To establish a violation of an OSHA standard pursuant to Section
5(a)(2) of the Act, Complainant must establish: (1) the standard applies; (2)
the terms of the standard were violated; (3) employees were exposed to the
hazard covered by the standard; and (4) the employer had actual or constructive
knowledge of the violation (i.e., the employer knew or, with the exercise of
reasonable diligence, could have known of the violative condition). Atlantic Battery Co., 16 BNA OSHC 2131, 2138 (No.
90-1747, 1994).
Complainant has the burden of establishing each element by a
preponderance of the evidence. See
Hartford Roofing Co., 17 BNA OSHC 1361 (No. 92-3855, 1995). “Preponderance of the evidence” has been
defined as:
The greater weight of
the evidence, not
necessarily established by the greater number of witnesses testifying to a fact
but by evidence that has the most
convincing force; superior evidentiary weight that, though not sufficient
to free the mind wholly from all reasonable doubt, is still sufficient to
incline a fair and impartial mind to one side of the issue rather than the
other.
Black’s
Law Dictionary, “Preponderance of the Evidence” (10th ed. 2014) (emphasis
added).
1. Citation 1, Item 1
Complainant alleged a serious
violation of the Act in Citation 1, Item 1 as follows:
29 CFR 1910.1200(h)(1): Employees were not provided effective
information and training on hazardous chemicals in their work area at the time
of their initial assignment and whenever a new hazard that the employees had
not been previously trained about was introduced into their work area:
Employees
who worked in chlorine unit 500 were not provided adequate and effective
training on the hazards of an unexpected release.
See Citation
at 6.
The cited standard provides:
Employers
shall provide employees with effective information and training on hazardous
chemicals in their work area at the time of their initial assignment, and
whenever a new chemical hazard the employees have not previously been trained
about is introduced into their work area.
Information and training may be designed to cover categories of hazards
(e.g., flammability, carcinogenicity) or specific chemicals. Chemical-specific information must always be
available through labels and safety data sheets.
29 C.F.R. §
1910.1200(h)(1).
a.
The Standard Applies
The scope and application paragraph
of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1200 is extensive and includes several exceptions to its
scope. For the purposes of this case,
however, the question of its application is simple. According to the standard, “This section
applies to any chemical which is known to be present in the workplace in such a
manner that employees may be exposed under normal conditions or in a
foreseeable emergency.” Id. §
1910.1200(b)(2). The weight of the
testimony indicated: (1) amongst other chemicals, chlorine was present in the
workplace; and (2) Respondent’s employees would not be exposed under normal
conditions at Formosa. (Tr. 84, 133, 142–43, 303).
Thus, the Court must determine
whether such exposure would occur “in a foreseeable emergency.” Id.
According to the definition section, a ‘foreseeable emergency’ is “any potential occurrence such as, but not
limited to, equipment failure, rupture of containers, or failure of control
equipment which could result in an uncontrolled release of a hazardous chemical
into the workplace.” Id. §
1910.1200(c) (emphasis added). In other
words, Complainant is not required to prove that such an emergency is probable;
rather, Complainant need only show such an equipment failure is possible. That such a failure—the uncoupling of the
tubing, which led to a chlorine release—occurred illustrates the potential for
such a release and, therefore, that such an occurrence was foreseeable. Thus,
on the face of it, the cited standard applies.
Respondent, however, claims a more
specific standard applies to the conditions at Formosa: the process safety
management (PSM) training standard.[5] Specifically, Respondent argues the PSM
training standard supplies the applicable training requirements for the release
of chlorine gas at a PSM-covered facility. In support of this contention,
Respondent points out the HazCom and PSM training
standards have overlapping purposes, but that the PSM standard supplies
specific training requirements to both host and contractor employees. The Court agrees the two standards have
overlapping purposes, and the structure of each standard is different insofar
as the obligations of a host employer are different from those of the contract
employer, like Respondent in this case.
That said, the Court still finds the HazCom
training standard applies and is not preempted by the PSM training standard.
According to Subpart A of Part 1910,
“If a particular standard is specifically applicable to a condition, practice,
means, method, operation, or process, it shall prevail over any different
general standard which might otherwise be applicable to the same condition,
practice, means, method, operation, or process.” 29 C.F.R. § 1910.5(c)(1); see also Manganas
Painting Co., 21 BNA OSHC 2043 (Nos. 95-0103 & 95-0104, 2007) (finding
fall protection standard more specifically applicable than personal protective
equipment standard). The requirements of
the HazCom training standard include: (1) methods and
observations used to detect the presence or release of a hazardous chemical;
(2) the physical, health, simple asphyxiation, combustible dust, and pyrophoric
gas hazards of the chemicals in the work area; (3) the measures employees can
take to protect themselves from such hazards, including work practices, PPE,
and emergency procedures; and (4) details of the HazCom
program, including explanations of labels, the system implementing such labels,
safety data sheets, and how employees can find and use such information. 29
C.F.R. § 1910.1200(h)(3). These training
requirements are targeted at the hazards associated with the handling of, or
exposure to, a specific chemical or group of chemicals.
The structure and content of the PSM
training standard, on the other hand, show it is primarily concerned with the
integrity of a chemical handling process, how to maintain it, and what to do if
integrity is compromised. See 29
C.F.R. § 1910.119(h). Specifically, a
contract employer is required to ensure that each of its employees is “trained
in the work practices necessary to safely perform his/her job”, which includes,
amongst other things: (1) known potential fire, explosion, or toxic release
hazards; (2) applicable provisions of the host employer’s emergency action
plan; (3) safety rules of the facility; and (4) safe work practices “required
by paragraph (f)(4) of this section”, which include lockout/tagout, confined
space entry, opening process equipment, and control over entry/exit into the
facility. Id. § 1910.119(h)(3). This information, for the most part, comes
from the host employer of a PSM-covered facility; however, contrary to
Respondent’s assertion, it is still the contract employer’s responsibility to
ensure the information is transmitted to and understood by its employees. See id. § 1910.119(h)(3)(iii)(contract employer required to document that each
employee received and understood training, the employee’s identity, date of
training, and means used to assess employee comprehension).
While Complainant arguably should
have cited the PSM training standard based on the allegation made in the
Citation narrative, such does not mean the HazCom
training standard is preempted by the PSM training standard. As previously discussed, the PSM training
standard is broader in scope than the HazCom training
standard. In fact, the requirements of HazCom training are only one part of the PSM training
regime. See id. § 1910.119(h)(3)(ii).
Thus, while Respondent is correct the
program areas overlap, the HazCom training is the
more specific. If Respondent were to train
its employees on HazCom alone, such would be
insufficient for Respondent to meet its obligations under the PSM training
standard, which covers a broader range of information. Complainant’s decision to cite the HazCom standard in this instance is a question of
prosecutorial discretion, not preemption.
Accordingly, the Court finds the cited standard applies.
b.
Complainant Failed to Prove a
Violation of the Standard
To
prove a violation of a training standard, Complainant must show Respondent
failed to provide the sort of training a reasonably
prudent employer would provide under similar circumstances. See Compass Environmental, Inc., 663
F.3d 1164, 1169 (10th Cir. 2011) (citing El
Paso Crane & Rigging Co., 16 BNA OSHC 1419, 1424 (No. 90-1106,
1993)). Such circumstances include “the
specific conditions [at the worksite], whether those conditions create a
hazard, and whether the employer or its industry has recognized the hazard.” Id. (citing W.G. Fairfield Co., 19 BNA OSHC 1233, 1236 (No. 99-0344,
2000)). Evidence of industry practice is
relevant to this inquiry; however, it is not dispositive. See Farrens Tree Surgeons, Inc., 15 BNA
OSHC 1793, 1794 (No. 90-998, 1992). If
the employer rebuts the allegation of a training violation, it is the
Secretary’s burden to show some deficiency in the training provided. See N&N Contractors, Inc., 18 BNA
OSHC 2121 (No. 96-0606, 2000).
Respondent’s employees testified
regarding the extensive nature of its training program. (Tr. 194, 198, 201, 209, 248–49, 301). Complainant has failed to carry his burden of
proof in that he did not establish what “sort of training a reasonably prudent
employer would provide” under these circumstances, nor did it show how
Respondent’s training regimen failed to meet that standard. As such, Complainant cannot prove Respondent’s
training was insufficient. Complainant
placed undue emphasis on two items in an attempt to meet his burden of proof:
(1) the CSHO’s “understanding” that the evacuation was chaotic (highlighted by
Mr. Zamora’s diversion from the evacuation path to warn the other crew); and
(2) the seeming disconnect between Mr. Lara’s ability to pass the requisite
test with flying colors when provided with translation help and his inability
to do so when the same test is administered in English-only format and no
additional help is provided. When
analyzed further, neither argument is convincing. In addition, the Court finds
Complainant also relied improperly on the fact that an accident occurred. See Lee
Way Motor Freight, Inc. v Secretary of Labor, 511 F.2d 864, 866 (10th Cir.
1975); Signode Corp., 4 BNA OSHC 1078
(No. 3257, 1976), petition for review denied,
549 F.2d 804 (7th Cir. 1977).
CSHO Argullin’s
understanding of the evacuation is undermined by the testimony of Respondent’s
employees, who were present on the day of the incident. Complainant did not
introduce any of the purported statements referenced in CSHO Argullin’s testimony, but instead relied upon CSHO Argullin’s recollection of what she was told, which she did
not attribute to any one individual. (Tr. 87). Such vague, unattributed
statements are insufficient to contradict the testimony of Martinez and Reyes.
According to the testimony of
Martinez and Reyes, the process of evacuation began when Reyes identified the
scent of chlorine as he returned to the site of the water leak with a set of
channel locks that was requested by the Formosa employees, neither of whom
identified the water leak as problematic. Upon smelling chlorine and observing
the indicator on the Formosa employee’s belt, Reyes and the Formosa operations
employee directed the crew to evacuate. (Tr. 296–97). According to all accounts, all of
Respondent’s employees in the Chlor-Alkali Unit evacuated as they were
trained—upwind and cross-wind, away from what they believed was the origin of
the leak—and were already evacuating the assembly point by the time Formosa’s
alarm even sounded. (Tr. 271, 300). It
was not until Formosa conducted a post-accident investigation they found the
chlorine leak did not come from the same location where the water leak
occurred, but instead emanated from an implement known as a “p-trap”, which was
in the path of the otherwise proper evacuation route. (Tr. 275). This is likely why each of the employees in
the Chlor-Alkali Unit had to be hospitalized.
That Respondent’s employees evacuated away from what they and Formosa
reasonably believed at the time to be the source of the leak, only to later
find out the water leak caused a release of chlorine elsewhere along their
escape route, should not and will not be held against Respondent.
Respondent’s employees, with one
exception, evacuated based on a reasonable assessment of where the chlorine was
coming from, which was consistent with the training they received. The lone
exception was Zamora, who walked across the road that cut through the 500 Unit
to warn another crew about the leak. (Tr. 278). According to Lindsey, the other employees were
in the IEM unit, which was roughly 100 feet north of the Chlor-Alkali Unit. (Tr. 278).
CSHO Argullin testified this act was the
principal reason for Citation 1, Item 1. (Tr. 75–76).
According to Martinez, Respondent’s
site manager at Formosa, Zamora did not re-enter the area they had just
evacuated, but instead took a slight detour across the road. (Tr. 221). To this point in the evacuation process,
Formosa’s plant alarm had not yet sounded. (Tr. 223–24). Insofar as the Court
can tell, Zamora’s actions appear to be motivated out of concern for his
coworkers, not on the failure of Respondent to provide adequate training. That everyone else on the Chlor-Alkali Unit rallied
to the proper assembly point and were headed to the showers before the alarm
sounded provides solid evidence that Respondent’s employees received proper
training and acted in accordance therewith.
With respect to the method by which
Respondent assessed training comprehension, Complainant’s suggestion that the perfect
scores achieved by Respondent’s employees were somehow unattainable is nothing
more than speculation. Complainant did not introduce persuasive evidence to
suggest the scores were manipulated or the training was deficient. Instead, Complainant’s principal argument is
that, post-accident, Lara has been unable to pass the same or similar exams he
previously passed to be permitted to work at Formosa. (Tr. 92–93). In other words, Complainant would have the
Court infer that Lara’s inability to pass the exam now proves his understanding
of the material was deficient when he was initially trained. Such an inference
might be permissible if Lara’s current troubles were coupled with other
evidence of deficient training; however, Complainant failed to show any
deficiency in the content or the method of training employed by
Respondent: Lara, according to Lindsey,
Martinez and Reyes, was at the assembly point along with the rest of his crew
and began exiting the facility prior to the alarm sounding.
Respondent is obligated to ensure
training is provided and understood, but the method by which they assess
understanding is not mandated by regulation. See 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1200(h)(3). Prior to the incident giving rise
to this case, Formosa allowed Respondent to provide the applicable training and
administer the post-training assessment. Afterward, Formosa changed its training
requirements to mandate computer-based testing at the Point Comfort training
facility, which only provides English-only examinations. (Tr. 250). Though
Formosa is certainly entitled to impose, and change, its own training and
testing prerequisites, post-accident changes do not dictate whether Respondent
complied with the cited standard, which does not include a specific testing
requirement. According to all accounts,
Lara was an engaged learner, who consistently asked questions and sought
clarification during the training provided by Respondent. That he can no longer pass an English-only
exam—which he is now required to take unassisted—that was previously translated
to him in Spanish is hardly surprising, and the Court accords such evidence no
weight. See Henning v. Union Pacific R.
Co., 530 F.3d 1206 (10th Cir. 2008) (evidence of actions taken
after an injury or harm to prove culpable conduct is excluded as not relevant); Rivera Pomales v.
Bridgestone Firestone, Inc., 224
F.R.D. 50 (D.P.R. 2004).
Finally, the evidence also suggests
Respondent’s employees were arguably better prepared for the leak than those in
charge of the facility. It was Reyes who
first smelled the chlorine upon his return to the site of the water leak, and
it was also Reyes who identified that the belt alarm of a Formosa employee was alight. By arguing the foregoing illustrates a
training violation, Complainant seeks to impose a higher burden upon Respondent
than what is required by the standard or that placed on Formosa, whose own
employees did not recognize the implications of the water leak in the
Chlor-Alkali Unit. That result is not supported by the clear reading of the
regulation, nor has any caselaw been cited by Complainant to support this
position. The evidence shows Respondent’s
employees received training, took an assessment examination, and, as a result, properly
evacuated after identifying the leak.
The fact that the collective group of Respondent’s and Formosa’s
employees incorrectly identified the pre-existing water leak as the source of
the chlorine, and plotted their escape route accordingly, is neither surprising
nor condemnable.
Instead of showing how Respondent’s
training regime was insufficient based on content, communication methodology,
or assessment, Complainant relied upon Zamora’s isolated diversion from the
evacuation route[6] and Lara’s
inability to pass an English-only examination that he previously passed with
the assistance of a translator. That Zamora, alone, acted contrary to
evacuation protocol to warn others does not negate that all of Respondent’s
other employees in the Chlor-Alkali Unit properly evacuated based on what they
knew at the time. Nor, for that matter,
does Lara’s current inability to comply with Formosa’s now-heightened training
and assessment requirements imply that he was inadequately trained for the job
at the time the incident occurred, especially when all indications were that he
properly evacuated from the area. Absent
any other evidence regarding the quality of the training provided, the Court
finds Complainant did not prove a violation of 29 C.F.R. § 1910.1200(h)(1). Accordingly, Citation 1, Item 1 shall be
VACATED.
2.
Citation 2, Item 1
Complainant
alleged a serious violation of the Act in Citation 2, Item 1 as follows:
29 CFR 1910.134(f)(2): Employee(s) using a tight-fitting facepiece
respirator were not annually fit tested:
Employee
working around chlorine gas was not provided required annual fit test.
See Citation at 7.
The
cited standard provides:
The employer shall ensure that
an employee using a tight-fitting facepiece respirator is fit tested prior to
initial use of the respirator, whenever a different respirator facepiece (size,
style, model or make) is used, and at least annually thereafter.
29 C.F.R. § 1910.134(f)(2).
After
she conducted her inspection, CSHO Argullin requested
Respondent’s documentation of respirator fit tests. (Tr. 63). According to the records, one employee, Adrian
Galindo, was scheduled to receive his annual fit-test in February 2016 but did
not complete one until a week or two after the chlorine leak. (Tr. 117). Based on Respondent’s failure to ensure
Galindo had an up-to-date, annual fit-test performed, Complainant issued the
foregoing Citation item, which it characterized as a paperwork violation and
assessed no penalty.
Respondent
contends the annual fit test was not required because Galindo was not using,
nor was he in a situation that required, a respirator. Instead, Respondent
employed Galindo as a gofer, which meant he performed ancillary duties, such as
tool retrieval, but did not remove rust or paint. (Tr. 199). Because Galindo was not using a respirator or
exposed to conditions requiring the use of a respirator on the date of the
incident, the Court finds Respondent was not required to perform a fit-test
until such time that one was necessary.
a.
The Standard Does Not Apply
To establish the cited standard
applies, Complainant must first show that an employee is using a tight-fitting
respirator. See 29 C.F.R. § 1910.134(f)(2). Oddly enough, however, the catalyst for Complainant’s
citation was an individual who was not
wearing a respirator: Galindo. Even
though there was no evidence to suggest Galindo was wearing a respirator on the
day of the chlorine leak, Complainant contends the annual fit-test requirement
is mandatory irrespective of whether the employee in question is exposed to
conditions requiring a respirator. The plain language of the standard, as well
as Complainant’s prior interpretations of it, indicate otherwise. When
determining the meaning of a standard, the Commission first looks to its text
and structure. Superior Masonry Builders,
Inc., 20 BNA OSHC 1182, 1184, 2002-2004 CCH OSHD ¶ 32,667, p. 51,417 (No.
96-1043, 2003). “If the meaning of the [regulatory] language is ‘sufficiently
clear,’ the inquiry ends there.” Beverly
Healthcare-Hillview, 21 BNA OSHC 1684, 1685 (No. 04-1091, 2006)
(consolidated) (citing Unarco Commercial Prods., 16 BNA OSHC 1499,
1502 (No. 89-1555, 1993)), aff’d in
relevant part, 541 F.3d 193 (3d Cir. 2008).
The cited standard is designed to
protect employees who are required to wear tight-fitting respirators from
atmospheres that cannot otherwise be controlled by engineering control
measures. See 29 C.F.R. § 1910.134(a)(1). To ensure the respirator is performing as it
is intended, an employer is required to have its employees that use respirators
take a fit-test. A fit-test is method to
“quantitatively or qualitatively evaluate the fit of a respirator on an
individual.” Id. § 1910.134(b). There are three situations that require a
fit-test: the first time a respirator is used, any time a different facepiece
is used, and annually thereafter. Id. §
1910.134(f)(2). According to the preamble, the annual requirement was
precipitated, in part, by studies indicating fit tests performed over a longer
interval resulted in a greater number of employees wearing ill-fitting
respirators, thereby inadvertently exposing them to hazardous atmospheres. Respiratory
Protection, 63 Fed. Reg. 1152, 1224 (January 8, 1998). This was due, in part, to minor fluctuations
in the employees’ weight, facial structure, and other conditions that might not
be immediately noticeable but accumulate over time. Id.
The standard is clear: the annual
fit-test is a required element of any compliant respiratory protection program.
But, the Court finds Complainant has
unnecessarily expanded the standard’s scope to require an annual test
irrespective of whether the employee is using a respirator and exposed to a
hazard. By doing so, Complainant
disregards the plain language of the standard’s opening clause, which requires
that an employee be using a respirator in the first place. As illustrated by
the preamble, the standard is targeted towards people who are required, either
by the conditions or by their employer, to wear a respirator and are, in fact,
wearing one. The hazard to an employee wearing an ill-fitting respirator may be
the same (or similar) to an employee not wearing one at all; however, the basis
for citing one condition over the other is different. If an employee is already
required to wear a respirator, the hazard is presumed, and the concern is
whether the selected equipment is performing as expected. If the employee has not been fit-tested, the
presumption is the respirator is ill-fitting and the employee is potentially
exposed. On the other hand, if an
employee is not wearing a respirator, the hazard and exposure to the hazard must
be proven, and the concern is whether a respirator is required at all.
The way Complainant has gone about
citing Respondent for this purported violation skips a couple of foundational
steps. First, Complainant did not prove
Galindo was wearing a respirator, which is the trigger for the fit-testing
requirement. See 29 C.F.R. §
1910.134(f)(2). Second, Complainant did
not prove the conditions in the Chlor-Alkali Unit were such that Galindo, who
was not painting or removing rust, was required to wear a respirator. Not even Formosa’s own employees, who came to
assist Respondent’s crew with the leak, wore tight-fitting respirators to move
through the plant.[7] Instead, Complainant argues that working
around chlorine processing equipment, and the subsequent, unexpected release of
chlorine, exposed Galindo to a hazard mandating the use of a respirator. Because
Galindo was purportedly exposed to a condition requiring the use of a
respirator (which he did not wear) and was not timely fit-tested on an annual
basis, Complainant contends a violation occurred.
There are multiple problems with
this argument. First, there is no
evidence to suggest the conditions in the Chlor-Alkali Unit required the use of
tight-fitting respirators designed to filter chlorine. According to Martinez, the crew members other
than Galindo were wearing respirators with cartridges designed to protect
against paint. (Tr. 182–83). There was
no indication that Formosa’s existing engineering controls were insufficient
such that respirators were needed under normal conditions; indeed, Complainant
did not cite Respondent because Galindo was not wearing a respirator or because
his co-workers were wearing the wrong cartridges for chlorine. But for the leak, there was no indication of
a hazardous atmosphere at Formosa’s plant that would require full-time use of a
respirator.
Second, Complainant’s strict
liability approach to the annual requirement disregards obstacles and changes
in employment that may prevent timely annual testing or even render the need
for a test obsolete. There may very well be instances, such as this one, where
getting an employee in to be fit-tested can be a hassle based on time,
distance, and availability. (Tr. 199–200).
If an employer, like Respondent, takes steps to remove an untested
employee from situations requiring the use of a respirator, it is unnecessary
to impose a strict annual testing regimen upon that employee until they will be
exposed again. This is especially so if the employee’s exposure to hazardous
atmospheres is intermittent.[8] Again, the plain language of the standard’s
opening clause indicates the testing requirement is precipitated by “an
employee using” a respirator. This not only explicitly requires active and
current use of the respirator, but also implies the employee regularly wears a
respirator as part of their employment.
Finally, Complainant attempts to
short-circuit its burden of proof on exposure by characterizing Citation 2,
Item 1 as a mere paperwork violation and pointing out that Galindo was exposed
to chlorine by the leak. As an initial
matter, characterizing this citation item as a paperwork violation only holds
water if Respondent complied with its obligations but failed to have an
adequate system of documentation. Unlike
filling out the OSHA 300 log, which is retrospective, the failure to properly
and timely fit-test can have serious consequences for someone that is required
to wear a respirator. 63 Fed. Reg. at 1224.
Complainant alleges Galindo was
exposed to a hazard based on an unexpected chlorine leak in a location that
otherwise did not require the use of a respirator. This, of course, is true; however, for Complainant
to meet its burden, the manner of exposure must be connected to the standard
Complainant alleged to have been violated. See
RGM Constr. Co., 17 BNA OSHC 1229 (No. 91-2107, 1995) (“The zone of danger
is determined by the hazard presented by the violative condition and is
normally that area surrounding the violative condition that presents the danger
to employees which the standard is designed to prevent.”) (citation omitted). Exposure under the cited standard focuses on
the potential failure of personal protective equipment. Galindo, on the other hand, was exposed to a
hazard because of the failure of engineering controls, which is a separate
issue from whether he was required to wear a respirator, let alone whether he
was required to get fit-tested for it. In other words, it was not Respondent’s
failure to schedule an annual fit test that caused Galindo’s exposure
While Complainant’s motivations are
admirable, his approach lacks common sense. Martinez testified without contradiction that
the only employees required to wear respirators were the individuals painting
and removing rust from the equipment. (Tr. 185–86). Galindo was not one of those employees, and
there was no evidence produced by Complainant to suggest otherwise. Without proof Galindo was wearing a respirator
or that he was engaged in painting and removing rust from the equipment,
Complainant cannot establish the cited standard applies or was violated. Accordingly, Citation 2, Item 1 shall be
VACATED.
ORDER
The foregoing Decision
constitutes the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law in accordance with Rule
52(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Based upon the foregoing Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, it is
ORDERED that:
1.
Citation
1, Item 1 is VACATED.
2.
Citation
2, Item 1 is VACATED.
SO
ORDERED
/s/ Patrick B.
Augustine Patrick B.
Augustine Judge,
OSHRC
Date: September 24, 2018
Denver, Colorado
[1]. Only Citation 1, Item 1 has an associated penalty. Complainant characterized Citation 2, Item 1 as “other-than-serious” and assessed no additional penalty. See Citation at 6–7.
[2]. Subsequent references to the parties’ Joint Stipulations will indicate the source and specific stipulation, e.g., “Stip. No. ___”.
[3]. Mr. Santana’s father, Magdaleno Lara, also worked on the crew. To ease confusion, the Court had the parties refer to them on the record as “Lara, Sr.” and “Lara, Jr.”
[4]. In fact, the alarm did not go off until Respondent’s crew was being removed from the assembly point to the decontamination showers. (Tr. 300).
[5]. 29 C.F.R. § 1910.119(h).
[6]. As well as the, unattributed testimony of CSHO Argullin.
[7]. This makes a certain degree of sense in that a good portion of the Formosa plant is in open air.
[8]. In one of Complainant’s letters of interpretation, Richard Fairfax, the Director of Enforcement Programs for Complainant, addressed a question regarding the testing requirement as applied to a group of home health aides, some of whom were intermittently exposed to patients with tuberculosis. In response, Fairfax stated that annual testing would not be required if exposure to TB requiring respirators was intermittent, but that testing would be required prior to each “initial” use of the respirator. See Letter from Richard Fairfax, Director, OSHA Directorate of Enforcement, to Noreen Coyne, Director, Tender Loving Care (March 29, 2004), available at https://www.osha.gov/laws-regs/standardinterpretations/2004-03-29-0.