Sefnco Communications, Inc., V. Dept Of Labor & Industries

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 5, 2022
Docket82376-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of Sefnco Communications, Inc., V. Dept Of Labor & Industries (Sefnco Communications, Inc., V. Dept Of Labor & Industries) 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
Sefnco Communications, Inc., V. Dept Of Labor & Industries, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISON ONE

SEFNCO COMMUNICATIONS, INC., No. 82376-1-I Appellant, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT OF LABOR & INDUSTRIES,

Respondent.

COBURN, J. — SEFNCO Communications, Inc. (SEFNCO) hired LaborMax

flaggers for a mobile operation stringing telecommunication lines. SEFNCO was

cited for violating the Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act (WISHA) when

one of the flaggers was observed standing near the middle of a two-way road as

traffic approached. SEFNCO appeals denying that it is a joint employer subject

to liability. It also challenges whether the flagger committed the violations and

whether the violations qualified as repeat serious violations. We affirm.

FACTS

In April 2018, SEFNCO contracted with LaborMax 1 to provide flaggers to

perform traffic control while SEFNCO’s aerial crew performed a mobile work

1 Anytime Labor Seattle, doing business as LaborMax, was the primary employer of the flaggers. The primary employer also was cited for violations but is not a party to this appeal.

Citations and pin cites are based on the Westlaw online version of the cited material No. 82376-1-I/2

operation in Federal Way to string telecommunication lines. The aerial crew,

who themselves were certified flaggers, included one person in a bucket working

on the power lines and two people on the ground. SEFNCO submitted work

permit documents for the project, including a site specific traffic control plan

(TCP). SEFNCO sent the TCP to LaborMax and expected flaggers to comply

with the TCP. If the SEFNCO employees determined that the flaggers were not

complying with the TCP, they would stop working or would not begin work. The

site specific TCP depicts anticipated locations of flaggers. 2

SEFNCO did not equip LaborMax flaggers or set their wages. Further,

SEFNCO could not fire LaborMax flaggers. However, SEFNCO retained the

right to stop all work if flaggers were not acting safely. According to SEFNCO’s

safety manual, the foreman conducts a tailgate safety meeting at all job sites,

including subcontractors, and is responsible for completing a job site safety

analysis and documenting any safety hazards on the tailgate safety form

immediately upon arriving at each job site. The safety manual also states, “The

supervisor/foreman will secure all work areas with properly posted traffic signs to

warn the public of any hazards and to ensure all workers are working in a safe

environment[.] Traffic Control Plan is to be followed according to the contract or

local, state and federal jurisdiction.” On April 3, 2018, SEFNCO’s on-site

2 The record only has pages one and two of a four-page “Site Specific Traffic Control Plan.” The specific area where the violation occurred, along Military Road South near 306th Street in Federal Way, is not depicted in the two pages in the record but was admitted below. The record does include a Google map where an “X” marks the spot where the inspector saw the violation.

2 No. 82376-1-I/3

foreman was Luis Legaspi. 3 Prior to starting work, Legaspi held the tailgate

safety meeting, which included the two LaborMax flaggers. Legaspi handed the

flaggers a copy of the TCP and made sure they had on all of their personal

protective equipment (PPE). Legaspi showed the flaggers the job site and

showed them where they would be setting their traffic signs. The flaggers were

about 50 to 100 feet from the truck with the aerial crew. Once the truck made its

way into the road, two flaggers then controlled traffic so the SEFNCO crew could

conduct its work stringing fiber on the telecommunication lines.

Legaspi testified that his responsibilities included making sure everything

on the job site was done safely, making sure the crew followed the requirements

of the TCP, and other responsibilities concerning the flaggers and their

performance of the job.

On the afternoon of April 3, Edgar Alvarez happened to be driving south

on Military Road South after conducting some construction inspections. Alvarez

is a Department of Labor and Industries (Department) health and safety

compliance inspector. As Alvarez drove up to the job site, he saw a flagger

walking in the middle of the two-way road holding a “STOP” paddle sign. The

inspector immediately stopped his vehicle, pulled out his camera, and took

photographs of the flagger standing near the center line of the two-way road with

his back exposed to moving vehicles. Alvarez then pulled to the side of the road,

parked, rolled down his window, and asked the flagger to move out of the road

3 The verbatim report of proceedings from the appeal hearing before the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals identified the foreman as Luis “Lecaspi.” Because all parties and the Board identified the foreman as “Legaspi,” we do as well.

3 No. 82376-1-I/4

and onto the shoulder. Alvarez testified that he did so because the flagger was

exposed to a hazard of potentially being struck by moving vehicles from both

directions.

The road was slightly curved. From his vantage point in the road, Alvarez

could see the flagger as well as two SEFNCO employees standing by the work

truck further down the road. The truck’s bucket was extended, and it could

barely be seen behind some tree limbs. Nothing obstructed the line of sight

between the crew on the ground and the flagger in the road.

Alvarez testified that some vehicles passed about two feet more or less

from the flagger, who was exposed to being struck by the vehicles. When the

inspector asked the flagger who was in charge of the job site, both the flagger

and Legaspi said Legaspi was the foreman and in charge.

Legaspi testified that when he was performing his work in the bucket, he

was focused on the energized lines and not able to observe the flaggers. He

also testified that if the ground crew had observed unsafe flagging, they would

have let him know. Alvarez then called the off-site supervisor to discuss the

violations, and the inspector opened a formal inspection. When Alvarez spoke to

the off-site supervisor, Rob Huet, to explain what was taking place, Huet directed

Alvarez to Huet’s contact at LaborMax. During his investigation, Alvarez

identified the flagger as Daniel Holland and photographed his flagger

certification, which indicated that he was certified as a traffic control supervisor

(TCS). A TCS is someone who has flagged a minimum of 2,000 hours and

completed a three-day course. Alvarez testified that Holland was not acting as a

4 No. 82376-1-I/5

flagging supervisor at the job site on April 3.

Alvarez reviewed the Department records for the past three years and

found that SEFNCO had a violation in 2017 for a “substantially similar hazard”

where flaggers were exposed to being struck by moving vehicles. The 2017

work was conducted at a “T-intersection” and also involved an aerial crew.

SEFNCO appealed the 2017 citations arguing, similarly, that the crew was

focused on its task, the crew did not see a flagger in the roadway, and that

SEFNCO hired trained certified and professional flaggers. SEFNCO entered into

a settlement regarding the 2017 violations that resulted in reduced penalties and

corrective actions, including training at least 50 employees in an eight-hour

certified flagging course. As part of that agreement, SEFNCO acknowledged

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