Morning Sun

Safety agency to review tornado deaths at factory

- By Bruce Schreiner and Claire Galofaro

MAYFIELD, KY. » Kentucky’s workplace safety agency will look into the deaths of eight people who were killed at a candle factory during the violent weather that spawned tornadoes in five states, the governor said Tuesday.

Gov. Andy Beshear told reporters that the Kentucky Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health Compliance would undertake a monthslong review of the deaths, which happened at the Mayfield Consumer Products factory as storms raked the area starting Friday night.

The governor said that such reviews are done whenever workers are killed on the job.

“So it shouldn’t suggest that there was any wrongdoing. But what it should give people confidence in, is that we’ll get to the bottom of what happened,” he said.

State and local officials say the company told them that all other workers have been accounted for. Initially, authoritie­s feared a much higher death toll at the factory because dozens of employees were working late to make candles for holiday orders. But Louisville Emergency Management Director E.J. Meiman said late Monday that authoritie­s now “have a high level of confidence that nobody is left in this building.”

Mayfield, home to 10,000 residents and the candle factory, suffered some of the worst damage in the country.

Beshear’s comments come as workers, volunteers and members of the National Guard fanned out in Kentucky to start the long recovery process. The tornado outbreak that killed at least 88 people — 74 of them in Kentucky — cut a path of devastatio­n that stretched from Arkansas, where a nursing home was destroyed, to Illinois, where an Amazon distributi­on center was heavily damaged.

Across Kentucky, about 24,000 homes and businesses were still without electricit­y Tuesday, down slightly from the day before, according to poweroutag­e.us

 ?? GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Volunteers, mostly from the Mayfield Consumer Products factory, help salvage possession­s from the destroyed home of Martha Thomas in the aftermath of tornadoes that tore through the region several days earlier, in Mayfield, Ky.
GERALD HERBERT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Volunteers, mostly from the Mayfield Consumer Products factory, help salvage possession­s from the destroyed home of Martha Thomas in the aftermath of tornadoes that tore through the region several days earlier, in Mayfield, Ky.

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