Chattanooga Times Free Press

Trucking firm ordered to stop transporti­ng hazardous materials

- BY BEN BENTON STAFF WRITER

The Federal Motor Safety Carrier Safety Administra­tion has ordered a Cumberland County, Tenn.-based trucking company to cease transporti­ng hazardous materials stemming from the March discovery of unsecured explosives and related materials in the back of a company pickup truck.

The federal order was served Monday on Rock City Stone Company LLC, doing business as RC Stone & Farms on Bean Pot Campground Road in Crossville, according to a statement issued Tuesday by the federal agency along with a 16-page Imminent Hazard Operations Out-Of-Service Order. The company was ordered to “cease all transporta­tion in commerce of explosives and/or a placardabl­e quantity of hazardous materials after a federal investigat­ion found the company to pose an imminent hazard to public safety,” federal officials said.

The owner of RC Stone and Farms, who on his attorney’s advice would not give his name because of the ongoing investigat­ion, said Wednesday that efforts to correct the violations began the day the truck was stopped by Dunlap police and the Tennessee Highway Patrol.

“We have reason to believe we were targeted by a competitor and we want proof that that wasn’t the case,” the owner said, but he didn’t name names.

However, he admitted the violations were legitimate and that he and his employees were “not up to date on DOT [requiremen­ts] but now we are.”

“Within 14 hours of being issued the order [on Monday], we had everything in

compliance except for the supervisor being trained and that was done this morning,” he said.

The owner said a 198page request for federal officials to rescind the order was sent Wednesday by overnight mail. The order sets down requiremen­ts for a rescission in a 14-point remedial action agenda.

Meanwhile, the company is allowed to continue blasting work, the owner said, but cannot transport any hazardous materials. He said suppliers will deliver materials to the company’s project sites for the time being.

“We’re limited in our business but we’re not out of business,” he said. “I do feel we’ve met the training requiremen­ts. The last 10 days, my guys have been in training. We’ve probably spent $10,000 to $12,000 getting everything up to date as far as training goes.”

The discovery of the explosives happened shortly after 10 a.m. on March 23, after officers stopped a 2003 Ford F-250 truck near the National Guard Armory on state Highway 28, according to a statement on the original incident issued by the Dunlap Police Department.

Dunlap authoritie­s said the truck was transporti­ng a large amount of explosives to a work site in Marion County but was not displaying the required placards nor did the truck’s occupants have the required permits and licenses to transport the explosives. Troopers took the lead in the continuing investigat­ion.

The company had a proper and legal transport vehicle sent to the scene, along with a driver that possessed the required license to transport the explosives, Dunlap police said.

Federal investigat­ors said in a statement on the order that safety violations were “so widespread as to demonstrat­e a continuing and flagrant disregard for compliance … and a management philosophy indifferen­t to motor carrier safety.”

Documents state that since Jan. 1, the company’s records show it “has transporte­d hazardous materials to approximat­ely 44 blasting sites in Tennessee — without proper placarding or preparatio­n of shipping papers.”

“The company operated without an assessment of transporta­tion security risks and without a transporta­tion security plan, including preparatio­n of [a hazmat] route plan in accordance with federal safety regulation­s,” federal officials state in the documents issued Tuesday.

The company may be assessed civil penalties of up to $25,705 for each violation of the out-ofservice order. The carrier may also be assessed civil penalties of up to $14,502 for operating a commercial vehicle in interstate commerce without necessary USDOT registrati­on, officials said. If violations are determined to be willful, criminal penalties may be imposed, including a fine of up to $25,000 and imprisonme­nt for a term not to exceed one year.

The federal agency also is considerin­g civil penalties for the safety violations discovered during the investigat­ion and may refer this matter for criminal prosecutio­n, officials said.

 ?? PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION’S FEDERAL MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY ADMINISTRA­TION ?? Federal officials Monday issued an Imminent Hazard Operations Out-Of-Service Order requiring a Cumberland County, Tenn., trucking company to cease transporta­tion of hazardous materials after violations were discovered during an inspection in Dunlap on...
PHOTOS CONTRIBUTE­D BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTA­TION’S FEDERAL MOTOR CARRIER SAFETY ADMINISTRA­TION Federal officials Monday issued an Imminent Hazard Operations Out-Of-Service Order requiring a Cumberland County, Tenn., trucking company to cease transporta­tion of hazardous materials after violations were discovered during an inspection in Dunlap on...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States