The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Local company heavily fined for ‘staggering’ list of violations

Southern Industrial Chemicals cited as unsafe workplace.

- By Michael E. Kanell michael.kanell@ajc.com

Federal authoritie­s have fined an Atlanta manufac- turer $239,439 for a series of health and safety viola- tions that included exposing workers to cancer-causing and other dangerous chem- icals while providing them with insufficie­nt informatio­n and training.

Southern Industrial Chemicals Inc., which operates as SIC Technologi­es, was cited by the Department of Labor’s Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion for “a staggering 67 serious violations,” the government said.

“Chemical exposures can lead to incurable and life- altering conditions, so it’s vital that employers take immediate steps to recog- nize and mitigate life-threat- ening hazards,” said Jeffery Stawowy director of OSHA’s Atlanta office. “Southern Industrial Chemicals failed to make employee safety and health a priority.”

Employees said the com- pany’s president, Wayne Chandler, has been out on medical leave and that questions were being referred to an attorney. A message ask- ing for comment from that lawyer was not immediatel­y returned.

A DOL spokeswoma­n said OSHA referred to the list of problems as “staggering” because of the large num- ber of violations cited. How- ever, there have been other cases with many more. In 2009, more than 700 cita- tions were issued to Hous- ton-based BP Products North America, she said.

BP was fined more than $81 million.

Since 2015, the largest pen- alty issued in Georgia was $654,726, a fine assessed to HP Pelzer Automotive Systems of Thomson, 120 miles east of Atlanta.

Among the problems cited by OSHAat Southern Indus- trial, which makes products for various metal-based pro- cesses, are that the company

iled to provide controls that would reduce employee exposures to hexavalent chromium.

That compound is “a well-establishe­d occupa- tional carcinogen associated with lung cancer and nasal and sinus cancer,” accord- ing to the Centers for Dis- ease Control.

Southern Industrial also needs to provide laboratory employees with informatio­n and training on hazardous chemicals in the lab, OSHA said.

Officials also said the company did not have the required facilities for quickly washing eyes or body in the event of workers coming into contact with dangerous chemicals. OSHA said the company also did not have drums and containers for the collection of waste that met federal requiremen­ts.

In addition, Southern Industrial did not have a “comprehens­ive hazard communicat­ion program” for the employees who handled and used hazardous chemicals, OSHA said.

American workers suffer more than 190,000 illnesses and about 50,000 deaths annually related to chemical exposures, according to OSHA. The agency said its website provides an overview of chemical hazards and toxic substances as a guideline for recognizin­g hazards and controllin­g dangerous exposures.

OSHA officials said the company has 15 business days from receiptof its citations and penalties to comply, request an informal conference with OSHA or contest the findings before the independen­t Occupation­al Safety and Health Review Commission.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States