Safety Agency Cites Texas Plant in Explosion
Source: NY Times
The federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration has cited the owners of a fertilizer plant in West, Tex., that blew up in April, killing 15 people, with 24 serious violations, Senator Barbara Boxer, Democrat of California, said on Thursday. But the agency has not announced the action because its public affairs staff has been furloughed by the government shutdown, Ms. Boxer said.
The violations included unsafe handling and storage of explosive and flammable chemicals, missing labels on storage tanks, failing to pressure-test hoses, bad or missing valves, and failing to have an emergency response plan. The agency also said that some workers were not trained for their jobs.
OSHA, which also proposed a fine of $118,300, decided to issue the citations now, during the government shutdown, to avoid a statute of limitations problem, Ms. Boxer said. She said that while the fine was disproportionately small, considering the deaths, injuries and widespread damage, other federal agencies were also investigating the explosion. Some of those investigations have been delayed by the shutdown, however.
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Ms. Boxer said that despite the shutdown, news of the enforcement action should be disseminated to prompt other chemical plants to make improvements.
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Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/news/fiscal-crisis/2013/10/10/safety-agency-cites-texas-plant-in-explosion/
TygrBright
(20,771 posts)justice1
(795 posts)Companies realizing how small the fines are for noncompliance are going to risk it.
cstanleytech
(26,319 posts)well as fines because right now companies seem to just shrug off the fines and and go right back to doing stuff illegally again.
fasttense
(17,301 posts)and they get to pay off regulators.
Just goes to show you that an average person in Texas is worth less than $8,000.00.