Workplace regulators are seeking fines totaling $1.35 million from the operators of two grain elevators in Illinois where three employees suffocated in on-the-job accidents last summer.
One of the two workers killed in July at Haasbach LLC’s elevator in Mount Carroll, Ill., was only 14 years old — four years below the minimum age for performing hazardous jobs under the Fair Labor Standards Act. The 14-year-old, Wyatt Whitbread, and Alex Pacas, 19, were trapped in corn 30 feet deep as they were “walking down the corn” to make it flow while machinery used for evacuating the grain was running.
Following an investigation of the Mount Carroll deaths, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration has issued 24 citations to Haasbach with proposed fines totaling $555,000. A separate unit of the Labor Department, the Wage and Hour Division, is seeking another $68,125 after finding that Haasbach violated child labor standards.
OSHA has also slapped 22 citations on Hillsdale Elevator Co. for safety violations related to the death of Raymond Nowland, 49, at an elevator in Geneseo, Ill. Those alleged violations, along with problems cited at a second company facility in Annawan, Ill., led to proposed fines totaling $729,000. Nowland died in an August accident after being buried by grain while working alone in the Geneseo elevator.
“The tragic deaths of three people could have been prevented had the grain bin owners and operators followed the occupational safety standards and child labor laws,” U.S. Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis said in a news release. “It is unconscionable to allow a minor to work in any high-hazard area. Haasbach’s and Hillsdale’s disregard for the law and commonsense safety practices has led to devastation for three families.”
At least 25 U.S. workers were killed in grain entrapments last year, the most since researchers at Purdue University started collecting data on such fatalities in 1978. In August, 2010, OSHA sent a notification letter to grain elevator operators warning them not to allow workers to enter grain storage facilities without proper equipment, precautions and training.
Haasbach and Hillsdale have 15 business days to pay the fines, seek an informal conference with OSHA or contest the penalties.
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