Sierra Resources Inc v. OSHA

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 30, 2000
Docket99-2492
StatusPublished

This text of Sierra Resources Inc v. OSHA (Sierra Resources Inc v. OSHA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sierra Resources Inc v. OSHA, (7th Cir. 2000).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit

No. 99-2492

SIERRA RESOURCES, INCORPORATED,

Petitioner,

v.

ALEXIS M. HERMAN,

Respondent.

On Petition for Review of an Order of the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission. OSHRC No. 98-0758--Irving Sommer, Chief Judge.

ARGUED FEBRUARY 10, 2000--DECIDED MAY 30, 2000

Before COFFEY, FLAUM and DIANE P. WOOD, Circuit Judges.

COFFEY, Circuit Judge. After Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) inspector, Tim Gainer, visited the Blue Island, Illinois, work site of Sierra Resources, Incorporated, Sierra was issued a nine- item "serious citation"/1 alleging violations of the OSHA standards dealing with lead exposure in construction work./2 In a thorough analysis, the Chief Judge for the Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission (Commission), relying primarily on credibility determinations, upheld the nine-item citation. In this borderline frivolous appeal, Sierra seeks review of the Commission’s order, arguing that: 1) the OSHA inspector violated its due process rights; and 2) the order is not supported by substantial evidence. We deny Sierra’s petition for review. I. BACKGROUND

Sierra is a small construction company located in Batavia, Illinois, and is in the business of installing and repairing structural steel. From February 3, 1998, to March 26, 1998, Sierra was a subcontractor on a project to renovate the Western Avenue Bridge in Blue Island, Illinois.

On February 5, 1998, OSHA received an anonymous telephone complaint that Sierra’s employees working on the Western Avenue bridge were being overexposed to lead (in the paint on the bridge) and, furthermore, that they were not being supplied with adequate protective equipment. The following day, OSHA sent one of its compliance officers, Tim Gainer, to inspect Sierra’s work site.

Upon Gainer’s arrival at the work site, he met with Sierra’s vice president, Robert Sutphen, and advised him of the complaint that OSHA received and that he was on the site to conduct an inspection. Although no employees were doing bridge work that day, Sutphen informed Gainer that Ed Hawkinson and Gary Orszulak had been descaling rust from bolts on the bearing assemblies and cutting the bolts with a torch in order that the assemblies could be removed and replaced. Gainer then asked Sutphen whether there was any lead on the bridge, and Sutphen responded that there was a "minimal" amount. The OSHA inspector next inquired if any air monitoring of the employees’ work area had been performed, and Sutphen replied that he had not done any at this site but that he had seen testing at a similar site and what he was doing was "okay." Unpersuaded by Sutphen’s assurances that everything was "okay," Gainer asked if there would be any more torch cutting performed that day because he was interested in monitoring the air quality within the employees’ breathing area while they were cutting the rusted bolts; Sutphen responded in the negative but promised to advise OSHA the next time such work was about to be performed. Before leaving, Gainer took a sample of paint from where the bridge work had been previously completed./3

Despite Sutphen’s assurances that he would contact OSHA the next time Sierra employees were engaging in torch cutting, Gainer did not hear from him. After being unable to reach Sutphen on February 10, 1998 (four days after Gainer first arrived at the site), Gainer went back to the site unannounced on Friday, February 13, and observed Hawkinson and Orszulak working on the bridge without respirators. He told Sutphen that he wanted to do some "sampling" but was informed that it would not be a good day to do so because for the remainder of the day the employees would only be doing "prep work" and no more torch cutting. The OSHA inspector informed Sierra that he would be back the next day and did so, this time fitting sampling pumps on Hawkinson and Orszulak./4

Gainer spent the remaining part of the day observing the two men, as well as reviewing Sierra’s lead program Sutphen had given him. The inspector noted that only Orszulak wore a respirator (both should have been), that both employees wore street clothes (while they should have been wearing protective overalls), and that the necessary clothes-changing and hand-washing facilities were no place to be found. When Gainer questioned Sutphen about these problems, Sutphen repeated that the work was being done safely and that he had the test results to prove it; however, even though Gainer requested the test results on each of the five visits he made to the site, Sutphen never provided them.

On March 17, 1998, Gainer received the test results from the air sampling pumps which revealed that Orszulak had been exposed to lead in excess of the permissible limit and also that Hawkinson’s exposure exceeded the action level./5 The OSHA inspector telephoned Orszulak on March 19, 1998, to give him the results and ask him if he had ever had any training in lead safety; Orszulak responded in the negative. On March 20, Gainer returned to Sierra’s job site and observed Orszulak torch cutting and another employee, Frank Mulcrone, descaling; both employees were wearing respirators and overalls, but the overalls had rips and tears in them and the feet in the overalls were cut off. Gainer interviewed Mulcrone who informed him that he had never received any training in the use of respirators nor had he participated in any lead safety programs./6 The OSHA inspector met with Sutphen and noted the poor and tattered condition of the employees’ overalls and, once again, inquired about a change area and a hand-washing facility. Sutphen responded that a change area was neither feasible nor needed, and that employees could use a bucket to clean up; Gainer looked into the bucket Sutphen had pointed to and discovered it was empty. While at the site, Gainer also met with Craig Satalic, the business agent for the employees’ union. Satalic informed the inspector that he had visited the Sierra job site on numerous occasions and asked for respirators, overalls, blood tests, and change and wash facilities; however, on each occasion the request was denied by Sutphen.

On March 23, 1998, Gainer held a "closing conference"/7 with Sutphen to discuss the nine violations of 29 C.F.R. sec. 1926.62. Ten days later, on April 2, 1998, pursuant to its authority under 29 U.S.C. sec. 658(a), OHSA charged Sierra with the nine violations that Gainer had observed.

Sierra appealed this nine-item citation to the Commission, but the Administrative Law Judge (ALJ), relying primarily on credibility determinations, affirmed the citation and assessed a penalty of $2100 for item one (the failure to ensure that its employees were not over exposed to lead) and a penalty of $750 for each of items two through nine, for a total of $8100. Sierra petitions for review.

II. ANALYSIS

In a review of enforcement actions by OSHA, we will affirm the agency’s legal determinations as long as these are not arbitrary or capricious and are in accordance with law. Caterpillar, Inc. v. Occupational Safety and Health Review Comm’n, 122 F.3d 437, 439-40 (7th Cir. 1997); 5 U.S.C. sec. 706. We defer to the agency’s reasonable interpretations of its own regulations. In re Establishment Inspection of Caterpillar, Inc., 55 F.3d 334, 336 (7th Cir. 1995). We affirm findings of fact if supported by substantial evidence. Caterpillar, 122 F.3d at 440 . . . .

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