Department Of Labor And Industries, V. Roof Doctor, Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 7, 2022
Docket56186-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Department Of Labor And Industries, V. Roof Doctor, Inc. (Department Of Labor And Industries, V. Roof Doctor, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department Of Labor And Industries, V. Roof Doctor, Inc., (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

September 7, 2022

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND No. 56186-7-II INDUSTRIES OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON,

Respondent,

v.

ROOF DOCTOR, INC. DBA ROOF UNPUBLISHED OPINION DOCTOR, INC. TACOMA,

Appellant.

CRUSER, A.C.J. — Roof Doctor, Inc. (Roof Doctor) was performing a commercial roofing

job in Tacoma in 2018. The Washington State Department of Labor and Industries (the

Department) received a referral indicating that some of Roof Doctor’s employees were not

following fall protection requirements. After an inspection by both a safety compliance officer and

an asbestos technical specialist, Roof Doctor was cited for several safety violations, including

violations of fall protection regulations, a ladder regulation, and several asbestos regulations.

After a proposed decision by an Industrial Appeals Judge (IAJ), Roof Doctor appealed to

the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (the Board), arguing, in part, that the asbestos penalties

should be reduced, the fall protection violation was a result of unpreventable employee

misconduct, and that it did not violate the ladder regulation. The Board ultimately affirmed Roof No. 56186-7-II

Doctor’s violations, as modified,1 and reduced the penalty assessments for most of the asbestos

violations. On cross appeal, the superior court affirmed the citations and the Department’s original

penalty assessments for the asbestos violations, reversing the Board’s penalty assessments.

We hold that the Board did not abuse its discretion in its penalty assessments for the

asbestos violations and reverse the superior court’s order as to these assessments. We further hold

that Roof Doctor did not establish the affirmative defense of unpreventable employee misconduct

for the fall protection violation and that Roof Doctor violated the ladder regulation. Accordingly,

we affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

Roof Doctor is a company that installs and repairs roofs, and sometimes performs

maintenance work on roofs, such as cleaning. It is based in western Washington and performs

about 3,500 roofing jobs per year. The company is owned by Ken Slater Sr. and is now managed

by his children—Shane Slater, Tara Monahan, and Ken Slater Jr.2

When the siblings took over management of the company, they sought to improve Roof

Doctor’s safety policies. They modified Roof Doctor’s disciplinary policy for safety violations, as

well as the company’s policy awarding a monthly safety bonus to employees if their entire crew

passes random safety inspections. Each manager conducts three or four random safety inspections

per day. Random inspections are also conducted by Roof Doctor’s now full-time safety inspector,

Bill Hoke. Not only does Hoke conduct three to five inspections per day and keep records of his

1 The Board adjusted the classification that the Department assigned to the fall protection violation. 2 Although Ken Jr.’s name is not exactly the same as Ken Sr.’s name, he is referred to as Ken Jr. 2 No. 56186-7-II

inspections, he also runs a safety orientation for new Roof Doctor employees. New employees are

also given handouts on safety procedures, including specific information about fall protection and

ladder safety.

II. DEPARTMENT CITATIONS

Roof Doctor began a commercial roofing job in Tacoma in February 2018. On the first day

of this job, Hoke inspected the site and found no violations. However, the next day, the Department

sent a safety compliance officer, Edgar Alvarez, after receiving a referral alleging that the

employees were working on a three-story building without fall protection. When Alvarez arrived,

he saw about nine workers moving around on the roof. None of the workers were tied off. The roof

was flat in some areas and appeared to have a low slope in other areas. Alvarez also saw workers

on the edge of the lower roof throwing materials into a dumpster on the ground below.

Once the workers on the roof knew that Alvarez was present, they began tying themselves

off to comply with fall protection requirements. Alvarez spoke with one of the three foremen on

the site and obtained consent to be on the worksite. Alvarez walked around with the foreman and

took measurements. Based on Alvarez’s inspection, the Department cited Roof Doctor for two

violations:

1-1: The employer did not ensure that employees used an appropriate fall protection system, in violation of WAC 296-155-24611(1)(a).

2-1: The employer did not ensure that the extension ladder used to access the upper roof extended at least three feet above the landing surface, in violation of WAC 296-876-40030(1).

On the day of the inspection, Alvarez sent a referral for potential asbestos violations

regarding the roofing material. Christopher Pyke, an asbestos technical specialist for the

Department, inspected the site the following day. As Pyke approached the site, he saw a worker

3 No. 56186-7-II

throwing material off of the roof into a truck. Pyke took samples of material that he found on the

ground near the building. Based on Pyke’s inspection, the Department cited Roof Doctor for seven

1-1: The employer performed asbestos roofing work without establishing a regulated area where asbestos exposure may exceed the permissible exposure limit, in violation of WAC 296-62-07711(1).

1-2: The employer did not ensure that an asbestos-competent person was supervising the asbestos work, in violation of WAC 296-62-07711(8).

1-3: The employer did not provide protective clothing to employees, in violation of WAC 296-62-07717(1)(a).

1-4: The employer did not obtain a written good faith inspection for asbestos, in violation of WAC 296-62-07721(2)(e).

1-5: The employer did not ensure that employees had received asbestos awareness training prior to performing asbestos roofing work, in violation of WAC 296-62- 07722(1)(c).

1-6: The employer did not maintain surfaces as free as practicable from accumulations of waste containing asbestos, in violation of WAC 296-62-07723(1).

2-1: The employer did not conduct an initial air monitoring assessment, in violation of WAC 296-62-07709(3)(a)(ii).

Shane Slater, the general manager, disciplined the entire Roof Doctor crew at the Tacoma job site

pursuant to the company’s safety violation discipline policy.

4 No. 56186-7-II

III. APPEAL AND HEARING

Roof Doctor appealed the Department’s citations, and an IAJ held a hearing. At the hearing,

the Department introduced records going back as far as 1997 that showed Roof Doctor’s prior

safety violations. These included fall protection violations, including a fall protection violation as

recent as 2017.

Pyke testified regarding the Department’s penalty calculations for the asbestos violations.

Regarding Violation 1-1, Pyke explained how he determined the violation’s probability rating. 3

About nine employees were physically handling the roofing material for three days. None of the

employees had any asbestos training and did not know that the roofing material contained asbestos.

However, most of the employees were experienced roofers and knew generally that asbestos was

a hazard. In addition, the employees were outdoors and there was light precipitation, which could

mitigate the hazard from the material.

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