The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has proposed fines of $169,500 against Howard Industries in Ellisville, Miss., for 17 safety and health violations in connection with the electrocution death of a technician who was killed while testing electrical transformers.
The 29-year-old victim, Benjamin Edwards Spoon, was pronounced dead at the scene after the Jan. 9 accident by emergency medical technicians, according to the Laurel Leader-Call, a daily newspaper in Mississippi.
OSHA said the company, which has plants in Mississippi and West Virginia, had not required employees to use work safety practices when dealing with live electrical circuits and failed to use locks and tags when de-energizing test equipment. Other alleged serious violations included failure to provide a rail on an elevated platform and exposing employees to potential electric shock hazards without providing them insulated gloves or other protective equipment.
In addition, the charges against the company included four repeat offenses, including the failure to provide proper machine guarding.
The company said in a prepared statement that it “takes strong exception” to several OSHA findings, and added that the fatal accident is the only one Howard Industries has suffered in more than 40 years of business.
The company plans to meet with OSHA to resolve those issues, and if no agreement can be reached, it will contest the agency’s findings, the statement said. Under OSHA rules, employers have 15 business days to contest, comply with, or request a conference regarding citations.
“Tragic incidents can be avoided by following OSHA standards and safety requirements,” said Clyde Payne, the agency’s area director in Jackson, Miss. “It is the employer’s responsibility to ensure that workers are trained and provided the appropriate protective equipment so they can perform their duties safely.”
Howard Industries makes electrical distribution equipment used by electric utilities and other companies worldwide. The Ellisville operation where the fatality occurred employs 167 workers.
CHRISTINE YOUNG


