Chattanooga Times Free Press

Nissan faces safety fine in Mississipp­i

- BY JEFF AMY

JACKSON, Miss. — A federal workplace safety agency wants to fine Nissan Motor Co. more than $21,000, saying the company’s Mississipp­i plant should have better trained a maintenanc­e worker who lost three fingers in July.

The citations were issued weeks before a Saturday rally to support unionizati­on by the United Auto Workers, where prounion speakers are likely to denounce the company’s safety record. Nissan, though, defends its safety record as “significan­tly” better than average.

The U.S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, in proposed citations Feb. 10, said the company failed because the worker didn’t know how to disable the line before he tried to work on it. OSHA also demanded that Nissan install buzzers and lights that would warn workers before a conveyor line started.

Nissan spokesman Brian Brockman said last week the company hasn’t decided if it will appeal the ruling.

“This issue is still open,” he told The Associated Press. “We’re still working through the process.”

The company also faces a potential $29,000 fine following

a November worker death at its Smyrna, Tenn., assembly plant. Nissan has said it’s contesting that fine.

Union advocates frequently voice safety concerns about the Mississipp­i plant. U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is supposed to headline the rally, organized by the pro-union Mississipp­i Alliance for Fairness at Nissan. The alliance seeks to link support for the union with civil rights for African-Americans, saying Nissan is unfairly hostile to unionizati­on efforts. Workers in Smyrna rejected the UAW in 1989 and 2001 votes, but no election has been held at the Mississipp­i plant in Canton.

“Nissan has union representa­tion at 42 out of its 45 plants around the world,” Sanders said in a statement. “The American South should not be treated differentl­y. What the workers at the Nissan plant in Mississipp­i are doing is a courageous and enormously important effort to improve their lives.”

NAACP President Cornell William Brooks and actor Danny Glover also are scheduled to speak.

The company in the past has said it opposes a union at the plant, but now says the choice is up to workers, although pro-union workers complain that Nissan continues to tell them to reject the UAW. The union has mounted a multiyear campaign trying to get the company to sign a neutrality agreement before a union vote, and has been trying to pressure Nissan through the French government’s ownership stake in Nissan’s business partner, the Renault Group.

“Nissan respects and values the Canton workforce, and our history reflects that we recognize the employees’ rights to decide for themselves whether or not to have third-party representa­tion,” Nissan spokeswoma­n Parul Bajaj said.

OSHA first sought to inspect the plant after the Japan-based automaker reported the amputation. But when an inspector asked that two particular employees be included as worker representa­tives, Nissan balked and began fighting the issue in federal court.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., is supposed to headline a prounion rally at Nissan’s Mississipp­i assembly plant. A workplace safety agency wants to fine Nissan $21,000, saying its Mississipp­i plant didn’t correctly train a maintenanc­e worker who lost three...
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., is supposed to headline a prounion rally at Nissan’s Mississipp­i assembly plant. A workplace safety agency wants to fine Nissan $21,000, saying its Mississipp­i plant didn’t correctly train a maintenanc­e worker who lost three...

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