Press Releases
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: JANUARY 20, 2008

EMERGENCY PETITION ASSAILS OSHA’S REFUSAL TO PREVENT COMBUSTIBLE DUST AND EXPLOSION RISKS

Unions Call on OSHA to Issue Emergency Standard to Prevent Future Sugar Plant Accidents


STATEMENT FROM THE UNITED FOOD AND COMMERCIAL WORKERS INTERNATIONAL UNION AND THE INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF TEAMSTERS

Washington, D.C. –Leading worker organizations today called on the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to issue an emergency standard on combustible dust. The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW) and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters filed a petition with the U.S. Department of Labor demanding that OSHA follow the 2006 recommendations of the U.S. Chemical Safety Board (CSB). Additional labor organizations representing workers at risk are also supporting the petition which was filed in reaction to a workplace explosion at a sugar refinery in Georgia on February 7.

The explosion at the Imperial Sugar plant near Savannah, Georgia, resulted in the deaths of nine workers. Scores of workers were also injured in the blast, and one worker is still missing. Reports indicate that combustible dust may be implicated in this explosion, as has been the case in previous food plant explosions.

With the goal of protecting workers from combustible dust explosions and resulting fires, the UFCW and International Brotherhood of Teamsters petition calls upon OSHA to issue an Emergency Temporary Standard which requires immediate controls instituted by employers where combustible dust hazards exist. The petition also calls upon OSHA to put a new Permanent Standard in place for control of combustible dust hazards in general industry; inspect sugar processing plants; and implement a Special Emphasis Program on combustible dust hazards in a wide range of industries where combustible dust hazards exist.

The UFCW represents hundreds of workers in sugar plants around the country., including the Domino Sugar plant in Baltimore, Maryland. UFCW members at the Domino plant narrowly escaped harm last November after a combustible dust explosion rocked the facility. The International Brotherhood of Teamsters represents nearly 500 members who are employed at eight sugar processing facilities throughout the United States.

The Bush Administration’s OSHA ignored the 2006 recommendation from the CSB to issue a rule that would have reduced the possibility of the explosion in Georgia and other The combustible dust explosion occurred on February 7 at the Imperial Sugar plant in Savannah Georgia that took the lives of 6 workers, 2 are still unaccounted for, and scores are left seriously injured, some critically. In Baltimore last November, at the Domino Sugar plant a similar explosion occurred, miraculously without injuries and fatalities. No comprehensive federal OSHA standard exists to control the risk of dust explosions in general industry. OSHA ignored recommendations made in 2006 by the U.S. Chemical Safety Board calling for OHSA to issue rules to prevent combustible combustible dust explosions that have caused hundred of deaths and injuries over the past two decades.

The explosions could have been prevented had OSHA heeded the recommendations made by the U.S. Chemical Safety Board made over a year ago (in 2006). Th That year, the CSB conducted a major study of combustible dust hazards in 2006 following three 3 worksite catastrophic dust explosions that killed 14 14 workers in 2003. The CSB report noted that a quarter of the explosions that occureed between 1980 and 2005 that were identified, occurred at food industry facilities, including sugar plants.

OSHA’s inaction on this workplace risk follows a pattern of the agency ignoring scientific evidence and its own rule-making guidelines. By law, OSHA was supposed to respond to the CSB’s recommendations within six months.

In 1987, OSHA issued the Grain Handling Facilities Standard as the result of grain dust explosions in the late 1970s and early 1980s. This standard has effectively reduced the number and severity of combustible grain dust explosions in the grain handling industry. However, the Grain Handling Facilities Standard stopped short of regulating combustible dust in industries outside of the grain industry.

The UFCW and the International Brotherhood of Teamsters join Representatives George Miller and Lynne Woolsey in the call for immediate OSHA inspections of all sugar-producing facilities.

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The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union’s 1.3 million members work in America’s supermarkets, meatpacking and food processing plants.  Founded in 1903, the International Brotherhood of Teamsters represents more than 1.4 million hardworking men and women throughout the United States and Canada.  Both unions are founding members of the Change to Win federation at www.changetowin.org

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