The Day

EB employee continues to improve

Serious concerns remain about current and long-term health of Tanessa Pabon

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

The lawyer for the Electric Boat employee injured in a May 7 fall said he has “serious questions” about the initial results from testing done on the fluid she ingested after the fall.

Tanessa Pabon, 22, landed facedown in fluid after falling about 30 feet while power-washing a submarine. Her lawyer, Eric Schoenberg, an attorney with the Freeman Law Firm in Hartford, said she ingested a “large quantity” of fluid.

Pabon’s doctors indicated that she has internal complicati­ons as a result of the materials she ingested and asked that the fluid be tested so they could determine how best to treat her, and to asses any long-term complicati­ons that might arise, Schoenberg said.

He made the request to EB to test the liquid, and the company provided the results on Monday. EB indicated there was limitation­s to what it could test for, Schoenberg said. The company tested for metals and the pH level, which was in a “very close range to fresh water,” and “the components they were able to find were not alarming,” he said.

“I have serious concerns about whether what was tested accurately reflects what she ingested,” he said, given she was covered with a “black, sludge-like substance” following the fall.

Pabon, who was found unconsciou­s after the fall, has credited a coworker, who performed the Heimlich maneuver on her to eject the liquid she ingested, with saving her life.

As of Friday afternoon, Pabon was still in a long-term rehabilita­tion facility. Her mother and stepfather have been by her side throughout and have made arrangemen­ts to take

“I have serious concerns about whether what was tested accurately reflects what she ingested.” ERIC SCHOENBERG, ATTORNEY FOR TANESSA PABON

her home soon.

“She’s made a lot of physical improvemen­ts, but there’s still serious concerns about her current and longterm health,” Schoenberg said.

He said neither Pabon nor her family are ready to talk publicly about the incident, but relayed that she “enjoyed her job” as a painter at Electric Boat, and hopes to return to work “one day.”

Schoenberg has filed two workers’ compensati­on claims on behalf of Pabon, one with the State of Connecticu­t Workers’ Compensati­on Commission and the other with the U.S. Department of Labor’s Office of Workers Compensati­on Programs. Both are pending.

He has declined to comment on any possible legal action beyond those two claims.

The Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion’s Hartford office started investigat­ing a day after Pabon fell. An OSHA spokesman said EB has been cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion. OSHA has six months from the time of opening an investigat­ion to issue a citation. However, not all investigat­ions result in citations.

EB has launched its own investigat­ion and has declined comment while it is ongoing.

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