Conservatives concerned about family values and liberals focused on the plight of slaughterhouse animals ought to spend a minute to consider something rarely discussed this year: the routine death of fathers, mothers and children on factory floors and other workplaces.
I was reminded of this by reading recently about the case of Imperial Sugar, maker of Dixie Crystals. The process of creating sugar produces a highly flammable dust. On February 7, some of that dust at the Imperial plant in Port Wentworth Georgia, ignited. An initial explosion sent more dust throughout nearby silos leading to a secondary explosion. Workers were blasted off their feet, or attacked by the flames that rolled in waves along the ceiling.
Thirteen people died, 40 were injured. “People had clothes burning,” said one forklift operator who witnessed the accident., “Their skin was hanging off.” [Click here for the Savannah Morning News's excellent coverage]
Last week, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration concluded that plant executives knew of the hazards — including the accumulation of large amounts of dust — and didn’t fix them. They fined them $5 million for violations including 69 that were “willful” (defined as: “a violation committed with plain indifference to, or intentional disregard for, employee safety and health”) Imperial Sugar is contesting the OSHA fines, arguing that many improvements had been made and were about to be implemented.
One senior executive recently testified before Congress that he’d warned other officials and was told to back off. “I was surprised that we hadn’t killed anybody already because the plant was so dangerous,” said Graham Graham, Imperial’s vice president of operations.
But here’s perhaps the most amazing part. On March 14, five weeks after the explosion, OSHA sent inspectors to Imperial’s other sugar processing plant, in Gramercy, Louisiana — and found the same sorts of conditions. Somehow, the death of 13 people had not prompted Imperial executives to fix comparable problems at their other plant. Here’s a photo OSHA inspectors took.
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That white stuff is combustible dust. It was so perilous that OSHA took the unusual step of posting an “imminent danger” notice “because of the high likelihood of fire and explosion due to the large amounts of combustible dust.” They issued another $3.7 million in fines for that plant.
The penalties, $8.7 million in total, were the third largest in OSHA history. Yet it represents about 1% of Imperial’s annual sales, 20% of its profit in 2007. In fact, its stock price is “on a tear” of late according to one financial analyst.
In 2006, an average of 15 people died each day in workplace accidents (a total of 5,703). Please watch Latacia Johnson-Byrnes talking about the death of her father, Earl Johnson at the Imperial plant. You want to “repair the world” or preserve families? Help keep people like Latacia from losing their fathers.
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posted August 4, 2008 at 1:03 am
And McClain want to waeken federal regulations and let the industry “police itself”.
That is like letting the fox guard the hen house. God save us from ourselves if we elect big business once again.
posted August 4, 2008 at 5:54 am
That’s just Republican family values.
If you’re not rich, your family doesn’t count.
posted August 4, 2008 at 1:05 pm
And besides, cleaning up the plant would cost money, and that might drive the price of sugar up a penny or two (never mind that sugar is one of the most heavily US subsidized commodities in the world).
If the $8 million does not get their attention, the next time someone dies in a fire in their plant put the entire board of directors on trial for capital murder. That should get something done.
posted August 6, 2008 at 2:15 pm
I do agree that the laws ought to be toughened so that if an executive knowingly and willfully ignores life-threatening hazards, they can be prosecuted for manslaughter
posted January 19, 2009 at 10:54 pm
Hi I am Latacia Johnson the daughter of Earl G Johnson who was killed Feb.7,2008 at the Sugar Refinery Explosion and tonight was the first time reading your article and I also agree that the laws has to be enforced because of their lack off and ignoring these DANGEROUS Signs of life threatening hazards I dont have my dad. And my dad and I where on a daily base relationship,my children go there after school everyday,he cooks dinner for them before going to work,its so many things I could tell you about my dad “EARL G JOHNSON”.
posted October 25, 2010 at 10:30 pm
http://buyworkerscomp.org/
Almost every business in the United States that has employees has to handle the problem of workers’ compensation. Most states (with a few important exceptions) essentially require employers to purchase an insurance policy to handle their statutory obligations to workers who are injured or made ill due to a workplace exposure. Whether your business is small or large, handling the expense and effort of meeting those statutory obligations is an ever-present challenge.