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Jason Strycharz, 40 suffered fatal traumatic injuries on Monday, January 23, 2015 while working at Primary Steel, LLC in Middletown, CT. AP reports:
NBC Connecticut quotes the fire marshal:
Some news accounts report the incident occurred at Primary Steel which is located at the same address as Kloeckner Metals. Mr. Strycharz’s family indicated his employer was Primary Steel. Bloomberg Business Week indicates that Primary Steel was acquired by Houston-based Kloeckner Metals Corporation in 2010.
The company’s Code of Conduct reads:
“We endeavor at all times a healthy and hazard-free working environment for our employees. We therefore comply with laws and rules on health and safety in the workplace and actively examine and improve safety standards.”
But their safety record is not something to brag about when it comes to OSHA inspections. In just the last two years, 10 inspections have been conducted at Kloeckner Metals’ plants in CA, GA, NC, OH, PA and TN. (There are no records in OSHA’s on-line database to indicate that Vermont-OSHA (VOSHA) inspected the Middletown, CT facility, at least not since 1998.) Seven of the 10 inspections were instigated because of complaints or serious injury incidents. An inspection in 2014 at their plant in Cincinnati, OH, for example, resulted in three serious and one repeat violations related to failures in machine guarding and lockout/tagout procedures.OSHA proposed a $56,000 penalty. That inspection occurred after a worker suffered what OSHA described as a “catastrophic injury.” In a news release announcing the citations and proposed penalty, OSHA noted:
“The company knew how dangerous these machines could be, and they did not put their employees first. It’s a culture too common in the manufacturing industry, and it needs to change.”
Another inspection last year at the company’s Sante Fe Springs, CA location identified serious violations related to unsafely stacked heavy loads which could have collapsed or fallen, and machinery inadequately restrained from moving. Cal/OSHA proposed a $36,750. And there’s this which may foretell the circumstances that led to Jason Strycharz’s death: North Carolina OSHA issued citations in November 2014 to Kloeckner Metals related to three serious violations at its Charlotte, NC plant. The violations included industrial slings being loaded in excess of their rated capacities, loads not balanced to prevent slippage, and failing to keep workers clear of suspended loads. It’s difficult for me to see how violations of fundamental safety regulations jive with the Kloeckner Metals’ Code of Conduct. It also is why I get annoyed when work-related fatalities are reported as “accidents,” as if they couldn’t have been prevented.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports seven work-related fatal injuries in Vermont during 2013 (preliminary data, most recent available.) Nationwide, at least 4,405 workers suffered fatal traumatic injuries in 2013. The AFL-CIO’s annual Death on the Job report notes:
Vermont OSHA has until the end of July 2015 to issue any citations and penalties related to the incident that stole Jason Strycharz’s life. It’s likely they’ll determine that Strycharz’s death was preventable. It was no “accident.”