BP Sought to End Role of Safety Office

BP has been trying to shut down an internal safety program that it formed under congressional pressure four years ago, a CNN investigation has found.

The oil company created the Ombudsman Program in the wake of a 2005 explosion at a BP refinery in Texas, which took 15 workers’ lives, and a massive oil spill in Alaska the following year.

The Ombudsman Program consists of a team of independent investigators who listen to worker concerns about safety and other work environment issues. The team of investigators then take the concerns directly to BP America President Lamar McKay. Since it began in 2006, 112 employees have filed complaints — 35 of them involving “system integrity or safety issues,” according to BP.

However, labor union representatives and former Environmental Protection Agency lawyer Jeanne Pascal said the company dislikes independent investigations, and that workers who raised issues have faced retaliation.

“They’ve been demoted, they’ve been terminated, they’ve also been blackballed,” Pascal said.

“I’m surprised we’re still here,” a source inside BP told CNN.

Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Mich.), who is chairing the congressional subcommittee investigating the April sinking of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig, said McKay told him earlier this year that the company could investigate complaints without the ombudsman’s office and planned to eliminate the program.

“One of the first things Mr. McKay said was, ‘I’m going to replace the ombudsman. I’m going to shut her down,’” Stupak told CNN. “He wasn’t even on the job for more than a few weeks, maybe a month or two, and he wanted to shut down the ombudsman. We encouraged him not to do so.”

BP has since promised Stupak that it will keep the watchdog program for another year. Company spokesman Steve Rinehart said BP has a “zero-tolerance” policy toward retaliation, and that all concerns raised with the ombudsman “are fully investigated and appropriate actions are implemented.”

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