The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sterigenic­s

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According to the Environmen­tal Protection Division’s report, Sterigenic­s told regulators that an employee was in the sterilizat­ion chamber “when (he) observed a small spark/flash.”

The report also said that the plant had suspended operations while the investigat­ion took place.

But the incident was far more catastroph­ic than suggested by the EPD, according to a report from the Cobb County Fire Department and a former Sterigenic­s employee.

When Cobb firefighte­rs responded to an alarm at the plant, a worker told them that an employee “was badly burned in an accident,” according to the report. The employee was loaded into an ambulance and taken away by first responders.

The former employee, who was at the plant that day, said the accident occurred when a coworker was preparing to use a forklift to move product out of one of the sterilizat­ion chambers. An ethylene oxide gas leak ignited, throwing the man and the forklift more than 30 feet, the employee told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

“His clothes were burnt off,” said the former employee of his injured colleague. The former employee asked that his name be withheld because he signed confidenti­ality documents.

The explosion, he said, “shook the whole building.”

“Wherever I walked I saw pieces of the ceiling on the floor,” the former employee said

The former employee also contradict­ed the EPD report that said the plant shut down in the aftermath of the accident.

Instead, he said, the plant manager had the forklift moved to the opposite side of the facility and operations resumed as normal.

“When he was hurt, operations were still going on,” the former employee said. “I was like, ‘We’re still turning a profit today?’ I’ve never seen that before.”

The federal Department of Labor did not immediatel­y responded to the AJC’s questions, and has yet to fulfill a Freedom of Informatio­n Act request for the full report about the incident.

Stop Sterigenic­s, a citizens group concerned about emissions that would like to see the plant shut down, recently obtained and publicized documents showing the company was reprimande­d by the state EPD in October, for failing to report a leak that occurred in April, 2018. Regulators did not take action beyond issuing a letter of reprimand.

The company initially reported 10 pounds of pure ethylene oxide had been released into the atmosphere because of a faulty pipe. The company later revised downward their estimate of gas released to 2.6 pounds.

All emissions from the plant — permitted and not — are self-reported to state regulators.

Bridget Kurt, an activist with Stop Sterigenic­s Georgia who lives a mile from the plant, said the company’s handling of accidents on site concerns her.

“I just wonder how much they are training their workers and how much they value their employees, and how much they value their neighbors,” she said.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Stop Sterigenic­s, a citizens group that would like to see the plant shut down, obtained documents showing the company was reprimande­d by the state in October, for failing to report a leak that occurred in April 2018.
ALYSSA POINTER/ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Stop Sterigenic­s, a citizens group that would like to see the plant shut down, obtained documents showing the company was reprimande­d by the state in October, for failing to report a leak that occurred in April 2018.

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