OSHA Cites United
Airlines at O'Hare International
Airport
CHICAGO -- OSHA has proposed
$215,500 in fines against United
Airlines Inc. in Chicago for alleged
multiple serious and repeat
violations of federal workplace
safety standards.
OSHA
selected United Airlines for
inspection after reviewing
occupational injury and illness
data, which included ramp services,
customer service areas, air freight,
aircraft and ground equipment
maintenance, building/facility
maintenance, business operations,
strategic procurement, medical
facilities and flight attendant
operations.
As a
result of its inspection, OSHA
issued 43 serious violations and
four repeat violations.
The serious
violations address hazards
associated with fall protection,
hazardous energy control procedures
and training, storage of oxygen and
fuel-gas cylinders, platform load
ratings and electrical hazards. The
four repeat violations, based on
citations issued and affirmed in
2006 and 2007, cover machine
guarding and electrical issues.
Proposed penalties for the repeat
violations alone total $57,500.
"Falls,
electrical hazards and machine
guarding issues, as well as energy
lockout/tagout procedures, which are
intended to prevent accidental
start-up of machinery during
maintenance, are problems that
should not exist at any worksite,"
said Diane Turek, director of OSHA's
Chicago North Area Office in Des
Plaines, Ill. "They are problems
that can be avoided if an employer
is dedicated to protecting
employees. Employers must remain
dedicated to keeping the workplace
safe and healthful, or face close
scrutiny by this agency."
Since 2004,
OSHA has inspected United Airlines
22 times at various locations
nationwide. United Airlines
operations at O'Hare International
Airport have been inspected eight
times since 2000 with only three of
those inspections resulting in
citations.
OSHA
operates a vigorous enforcement
program, conducting more than 39,000
inspections in fiscal year 2007 and
exceeding its inspection goals in
each of the last eight years. In
fiscal year 2007, OSHA found nearly
89,000 violations of its standards
and regulations. |