MIOSHA eNews — January 6, 2023

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Portland Products, Inc. Earns Exemplary MSHARP Workplace and Safety Status

PORTLAND, Mich.—Portland Products, Inc. of Portland, MI is the newest company recognized by the Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MIOSHA) for implementing and maintaining outstanding workplace safety and health standards.

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A motor vehicle metal stamping company with 115 employees, Portland Products, Inc. has an excellent safety and health management system in place. It joins only six other companies awarded the Michigan Safety and Health Achievement Recognition Program (MSHARP) certification from MIOSHA. Visit: https://portlandproducts.com/

Comprehensive Review of Industrial Hygiene Course

CIHR Word

During this course, you will:

  • Complete an intensive review of Industrial Hygiene: Presentations cover all 17 Board of Global Credentialing (GBC) exam rubrics.
  • Receive detailed digital notes of all presentations.
  • Receive a quiz book with sample questions.

When:  January 10 - March 16, 2023

Where: Virtual Synchronous (live presentations that will be recorded) and On-Demand (pre-recorded presentations). Access to recorded presentations for one year.

Cost: $1,200

Registerhttps://www.eventbrite.com/e/comprehensive-industrial-hygiene-review-winter-2023-registration-423570569977

Contact: Sheryl Ulin, Email: ce.programs@umich.edu

Sponsors: University of Michigan Center for Occupational Health Safety and Engineering and the Michigan Industrial Hygiene Society

Tree Trimming Professionals: Electrical Hazard Awareness Training

Are you aware that 15 to 20% of all tree worker fatalities are caused by electrocutions, and that all tree workers in the field have some exposure to electricity? Even a secondary wire or streetlamp wire can generate enough electricity to be fatal. Although your company may not do line clearance tree work, all tree workers are exposed to potentially energized conductors throughout the season and must be trained to at least recognize and avoid this deadly hazard. To prevent fatal accidents, we encourage all professionals involved in the pruning or removal of trees to participate in this formal and documented training.

When: Tuesday, January 10, 2023 (9:00 a.m - 4:00 p.m.)

Where: Bingham Center, 30800 Telegraph, Ste. 1751, Bingham Farms, MI 48025

Cost: $45.00 per person

Registration:

  • Register online at https://www.landscape.org/
  • All sales are final. No refunds.
  • For questions, call Silvia Eichen at 248-646-4992.

Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) First Aid MIOSHA Grant Funded Workshop

Wednesday, January 11, 2023 

Michigan Green Industry (MGIA), an alliance member with MIOSHA is presenting CPR/ First Aid Training. Did you know that every crew that leaves your shop should have at least two people certified in CPR/ First Aid. You can never be too prepared for an accident!  Information provided in this workshop may save an employee’s life in a potentially serious work situation. This CPR/First Aid class follows the American Heart Association's guidelines and falls under the title of “Heart Saver Course”. All participants of this class will receive an “American Heart Association” Heart Saver Card valid for 2 years. Although this class is especially geared to the tree care/landscape industry, anyone is welcome to participate! Note: All professionals working in or around trees are required by OSHA and MIOSHA to receive CPR/First Aid training. Standard requirements for tree care professionals not certified in line clearance are as follows:  In the absence of a medical facility MIOSHA requires that there be at least one trained people (validated by a current certificate) per crew.

Speaker: Dr. John Ball, Ph.D., Professor of Forestry, South Dakota State University, E.M.T., American Heart Association BLS Instructor   

When: Wednesday, January 11, 2023 (Check In 12:00 p.m.) 12:30 p.m. – 3:30 p.m.

Where: Bingham Center, 30800 Telegraph, Suite 1751, Bingham Farms, MI 48025

Cost: $75.00 per person

Attendance limited to 25 attendees per session!

Registration:

  • Register online at www.landscape.org
  • All sales are final. No refunds.
  • For questions, call 248-646-4992.

Michigan Worker Deaths of 2022

There have been 40 work-related fatalities reported to MIOSHA in 2022. The information below shares preliminary details about the most recent fatalities reported to MIOSHA, which are believed to be covered by the MIOSH Act. The descriptions reflect information provided to MIOSHA at the initial report of the incidents and are not the result of the official MIOSHA investigations.

Preliminary summaries of the most recent 2022 incidents:

A 29-year-old steel laborer was operating an extendable boom forklift to pick up pre-insulated metal panels when he leaned through the cab and was crushed by the lift boom.

A 61-year-old loader operator had a hydraulic line break. As he attempted to replace the hydraulic line, he loosened the wrong line and the load came down on him, crushing him against the axle.

A 35-year-old laborer was struck by a dozer that was backing up.

A 57-year-old truck driver was delivering trusses to a jobsite. While the employee was unloading the trusses, the trusses fell off the truck onto him, and he passed away on the scene.

A 51-year-old corrections officer felt ill and did not report to work. He tested positive for COVID-19 and later passed away.

A 61-year-old construction foreman was performing framing activities and fell from the third story of a residential construction project. He was not wearing fall protection.

A 61-year-old tree trimmer was aloft in a tree, using a chainsaw to trim branches, when he fell approximately 50 feet. 

A 68-year-old electrician was performing electrical activities when he fell off a ladder.

A 45-year-old corrections officer fell ill and did not report to work. He tested positive for COVID-19 and later passed away. 

A 24-year-old head milker was working in the yard when another employee operating a loader ran over him. 

A 56-year-old supervisor tested positive for COVID-19 and did not return to work. She later went to the hospital, was released and passed away. 

A 77-year-old direct service professional tested positive for COVID-19 and did not return to work. She was admitted to the hospital for COVID-19, was put on a ventilator and later, passed away. 

A 59-year-old owner and 68-year-old laborer were placing underground drainage tiles for a pole building project. The property owner discovered the excavation had collapsed and called 911. Authorities later recovered two bodies. 

A 65-year-old flagman was standing adjacent to the racetrack at the pit entrance when a race car lost control and fatally struck him.

A 34-year-old roofer was using a ladder to install a metal roof when he fell approximately 10 feet and struck a metal trash bin. 

A 48-year-old maintenance worker was taking down a section of air ducts and using a powered industrial truck to help support and lower the duct system when the weight of the ducts caused the truck to tip over, crushing him.

A 49-year-old laborer was removing trash through a second story window into a wood box on the forks of a rough terrain fork truck when they exited the window into the box. Both the employee and the box fell approximately 16 feet. 

A 57-year-old maintenance technician was installing components for a new conveyor system with two other employees when the conveyor components toppled from a forklift and landed on the victim. 

A 58-year-old mechanic was performing maintenance on a conveyor system when it began moving and the employee was struck by and became caught in the system.

A 44-year-old general laborer was attempting to repair a tire on a wood chipper when the jack shifted and the woodchipper fell, crushing him. 

A 53-year-old truck driver walked behind a tandem dump truck to clear the bumper of concrete debris, when they were struck by a bulldozer backing up.  

A 57-year-old lead worker was attempting to clear a tree that was blocking both lanes of a roadway, when he was struck by a vehicle.

A 30-year-old mental health technician was overseeing patients outside of the clinic when he had a confrontation with an individual near the facility. The individual fatally shot the employee.  

An 18-year-old crewman was driving an off-road vehicle on a public road and was struck by a motor vehicle. 

A 47-year-old painter was on a ladder painting the exterior of a residential house when he fell approximately 20 feet, head-first on to another painter below.  

A 59-year-old custodian was struck by a cardboard bale that slipped off another bale, pinning him to the ground against a fork truck. 

A 23-year-old field worker was struck in the head by a 40-foot dead tree while waiting for his tote of blueberries to be weighed. 

A 31-year-old shipping/receiving handler was using a Hilo to move pallets containing nylon sacks of plastic pellets when he was struck by one of the nylon sacks. 

A 46-year-old roofer and crew leader was climbing a secured ladder while carrying a 10-foot piece of metal trim when the metal contacted a live electrical line, causing him to fall approximately 18 feet to the ground. 

A 30-year-old seasonal worker fell off the back of a trailer that was being towed by a tractor while traveling between farming fields. 

A 39-year-old framer was working on fascia boards from a roof with others when a piece of wood being used for a slide guard broke, causing him to fall to his death. 

A 62-year-old owner was performing work while standing on a portable ladder. The victim fell to the concrete surface below. He was transported to the nearby hospital and passed away on August 17, 2022

A 57-year-old carpenter fell off a scaffold approximately 20-feet to the ground. He was transported to the hospital and passed away due to injuries sustained.  

A 77-year-old truck driver was working on a broken lift gate with another employee. The victim was crushed by the lift gate.

A 25-year-old Hilo operator was operating a powered industrial truck. The employee took a turn too quickly and was ejected. The powered industrial truck tipped over and fell onto the victim.

A 51-year-old truck driver delivering material was folding load securement straps next to the trailer. An employee at the delivery location was using a forklift to unload the material and bumped a section of the stacked material off the trailer onto the victim.

 A 30-year-old maintenance technician was performing maintenance on a tractor to prepare for the winter season. While exiting the front of the tractor, the victim became pinned between the cab and the bucket support arm. He was transported to the hospital and passed away due to injuries sustained.

A 44-year-old maintenance worker was crushed between the loading dock and a box truck. The box truck was being driven by an employee from another company.

A 22-year-old construction worker was installing new windows on a residential site when the boom-lift he was standing on tipped over causing him to fall and hit his head on trees.

Every life is precious. Our mutual goal must be that every employee goes home at the end of every shift unharmed.

If you need help or assistance in ensuring your workplace is safe, MIOSHA is here to assist you. The Consultation Education and Training (CET) Division provides workplace safety and health training and consultations to employers and employees throughout Michigan, free of charge. Contact CET today at 800-866-4674 or request CET services online.

Agency Instructions Issued

December 1, 2022 Whistleblowers Investigations Manual

December 1, 2022 Roadway Work Zones – Inspections and Citation Guidance for Construction and Maintenance

December 5, 2022 — Oil and Gas Drilling and Servicing Operations – State Emphasis Program (SEP)

December 6, 2022 — Coburn Equation Use

Press Releases

December 20, 2022 Portland Products, Inc. Earns Exemplary MSHARP Workplace Safety and Health Status

Variances

Variances from MIOSHA standards must be made available to the public in accordance with Part 12, Variances (R408.22201 to 408.22251). MIOSHA variances are published online at:
michigan.gov/mioshavariances.

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