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General contractor on deadly Amazon project has previous minor OSHA run-ins | Dump Trucks Charlotte NC

That does not include the investigation into the two workers' deaths, which will likely be handled by Virginia Occupational Safety and Health under the authority of its federal OSHA-approved state plan.
  • Of the 19 cases, OSHA cited and fined Conlan twice for violations on jobsites in Georgia. In March 2020 the agency proposed a fine of $8,675 for a serious violation of the training requirements for cranes and derricks but, under an informal settlement agreement the next month, reduced that amount to $5,205. According to OSHA records, the address of that project matches the address of an Amazon robotics fulfillment center in Stone Mountain. 
  • The second OSHA investigation that earned Conlan a citation but no fine took place in June 2018 and was related to toxic and hazardous substances and the requirement that they be labeled properly. The remainder of the cases resulted in no inspection or no other action on the part of OSHA. 
  • Dump Trucks Columbus OH Insight:

    Construction Dive reached out to Conlan for comments on its previous OSHA inspections and the latest case in Suffolk but did not receive a response by press time. 

    In addition, there have been no details released yet about the nature of the accident at the Virginia jobsite. When complete, the fulfillment center will have a footprint of 822,833 square feet, and at 95 feet high and four-and-a-half stories tall, will have 3.8 million square feet of space overall, according to the Suffolk News Herald.

    Earlier this year, an employee of Columbus Steel Erectors was killed on another Amazon project, the $1.5 billion Amazon Air hub at Cincinnati/Northern Kentucky International Airport (CVG) in Hebron, Kentucky. Ironworker Loren Shoemake died from blunt force trauma, according to the Boone County, Kentucky, coroner. 

    At the end of July, OSHA cited Columbus Steel in the accident and proposed fines of $88,900. The largest fine of $70,000 was for a willful violation of OSHA Standard 1904.40(a), which requires employers to hand over copies of records within four business days when requested by an authorized government representative. 

    The other three violations were all categorized as "serious" and carried proposed penalties of $6,300 each. OSHA said Columbus Steel did not adhere to:

    • Standard 1926.753(d)1) — Routes for suspended loads shall be preplanned to ensure that no employee is required to columbus oh dump truck company directly below a suspended load unless employees are engaged in the initial connection of the steel or hooking and unhooking load.
    • Standard 1926.1413(a)(1) — A competent person must begin a visual inspection prior to each shift the columbus oh dump trucks is used, which must be completed before or during that shift.
    • Standard 1926.1413(b)(1) — Each month an inspection must be conducted in accordance with paragraph (a) (shift inspection) of this section, which includes the observation of wire ropes (running and standing) that are likely to be in use during the shift for apparent deficiencies.