A West Virginia chemical plant that suffered an explosion that killed three workers in December is contesting charges of 18 safety violations by federal workplace regulators.
AL Solutions Inc. of New Cumberland, W.Va., was hit with the citations, along with $154,000 in proposed fines, last month by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
The workers killed at the plant, which makes chemicals used in aluminum manufacturing, were processing flammable titanium powder, according to WTOV9, an NBC affiliate in Steubenville, Ohio.
Brothers Jeffery Scott Fish and James E. Fish, both of New Cumberland, died instantly. Co-worker Steven Swain of Weirton died days later. A fourth worker, Dave Williams, was treated for burns to his hands and face but survived.
According to the Associated Press, the accident remains under investigation by various agencies, including the U.S. Chemical Safety Board. The December explosion marked the third fatal explosion at the plant in 15 years, prompting OSHA to put the company into its Severe Violators Enforcement Program.
In a prepared statement, the company did not explain its reasons for contesting the OSHA citations. “We must defer comment until all investigations are complete,” it said.
The OSHA case will now go to the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission, an independent federal agency that handles contested violations. After that, either side could take the ruling to a federal appellate court.
The citations issued against the plant included one minor and 16 serious violations. The remaining violation was willful, the most severe level. It involved the company’s use of an allegedly unsafe water sprinkler system, which OSHA said created an explosion hazard.
LILLY FOWLER


