Failure to Protect Employees from Workplace Hazards Leads to Six-Figure Fines for Two Facilities

February 6, 2017 | Strategic Insights for Ambulatory Care

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​A New Jersey medical center is facing a penalty of $174,593 from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for failing to protect an employee from electrical hazards. The worker ultimately died from workplace-related injuries. OSHA began its investigation on June 28, 2016, after the facility informed the agency that the worker was hospitalized after falling from a ladder as a result of an electrical shock he sustained while changing an overhead ballast in a light fixture. The worker died from his injuries three weeks later. OSHA cited the facility with a willful violation for requiring employees to change ballasts without proper lockout/tagout training practices, as well as several serious violations including failure to de-energize circuits and failure to maintain an electrical lockout/tagout program.

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