A construction company in Lancaster County failed to
provide fall protection to employees who were working nearly 18 feet in the
air, according to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
This week OSHA issued citations to West Cocalico
Township-based Burkholder Builders for seven safety violations, four of which
were considered serious by the agency.
The violations resulted in a fine of $64,400.
Burkholder Builders was described by Kevin Kilp, director
of OSHA’s Harrisburg area office, as being reckless with employees.
Employees were found working on scaffolding and roofs
nearly two stories up without fall protection during a Nov. 16 inspection at a
Leola work site, according to OSHA.
Examples of fall protection that could be used are safety
nets or guard rails, according to Klip.
Klip said that OSHA has different criteria for initiating
an inspection, but in this case it was a self referral. An OSHA compliance
officer was out in the field already, when imminent danger was observed. With
concurrence from the Harrisburg office, an inspection was opened.
OSHA inspectors determined that the company was not
following proper procedures when using forklifts.
Employees also were not provided with eye protection
while using a nail gun, which they weren’t trained to use properly.
According to Kilp, this isn’t the first time the company
has had safety violations.
Burkholder Builders was cited in 2006 after a fatal fall
occurred at one of its projects.
Burkholder Builders, which did not respond to requests
for comment, has three options, as does any company when cited by OSHA.
It can comply within 15 business days and pay the
penalty, request an informal conference with the director of OSHA or contest
the findings.
Source: Central
Penn Business Journal
City Council president wants law change to enforce hiring
of city residents
Philadelphia
Council President Darrell Clarke wants to make sure projects
getting tax breaks and other subsidies are making enough of an effort to hire
city residents.
Since
2012, businesses getting more than $250,000 in taxpayer support are expected to
prioritize Philadelphia applicants when hiring for entry-level jobs by making a
"first source agreement" with the city's Commerce Department,
although they're not required to actually meet a certain quota.
The
law sets the target for local hiring at 50 percent.
Clarke
wants to change that law by making city council's Economic Opportunity Review
Committee responsible for enforcing it, a job now belonging to the city's
Commerce Department.
Go
to Newsworks.org for a
response from the Mayor's Office.
Source: Philadelphia
Business Journal
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