OSHA Seeks $162,000 in Fines in Chemical Exposure Death

A Georgia contractor has been smacked with $162,000 in proposed federal fines stemming from the death of a worker who, authorities said, succumbed after inhaling the toxic fumes of a chemical paint remover.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration cited Stockbridge, Ga.,-based Creative Multicare Inc. on two willful violations, the agency’s most severe charges, along with six other infractions.

Agency officials said Robert Beall, 49, was found dead in February on the floor of a small bathroom in an apartment in Clarkston, Ga., while using methylene chloride to remove paint from a bathtub surface.

Creative Multicare does plumbing, counter resurfacing and other renovations for apartments and condominiums.

The two willful violations included allowing workers to be highly overexposed to methylene chloride. According to OSHA, exposure to the chemical can harm the central nervous system and the liver, and it raises the risk of cancer.

Excessive inhalation also can cut oxygen to the heart, which can lead to a heart attack, particularly in people predisposed to heart disease. In Beall’s case, “That’s exactly what happened,” said OSHA spokesman Michael D’Aquino.

Based on information provided by the medical examiner, OSHA calculated that Beall had been exposed to more than 47 times the level considered safe.

OSHA said the company failed to require employees to use air-supplied respirators when handling the chemical and neglected to conduct medical examinations and annual fitness tests for employees who wore half-mask and full-mask respirators.

There was no official comment from Creative Multicare. An employee who answered the phone at the company but did not identify herself said Creative Multicare has scheduled an informal conference with OSHA to review the case but had not decided if it would contest the agency’s findings.


 

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