Jennie-O Turkey Store Faces Fines over Safety

US – Jennie-O Turkey Store faces fines of up to $300,000 for 11 safety violations at its Barron facility after a worker's arm was amputated below the shoulder while the individual was conducting cleaning activities in a confined space.
calendar icon 27 January 2012
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Jennie-O Turkey Store, based in Willmar, Minnestota is a division of Austin, Minnesota-headquartered Hormel Foods Corp.

"Jennie-O Turkey Store has a legal responsibility to follow established permit-required confined space regulations to ensure that its employees are properly protected from known workplace hazards," said Mark Hysell, director of OSHA's Eau Claire Area Office.

"Failing to ensure protection through appropriate training and adherence to OSHA regulations led to a worker losing an arm."

OSHA initiated an inspection after the 20 July 2011, incident, in which the employee's arm allegedly became caught in an energized turkey shackle line while the employee was working alone in a confined space.

Afterward, the employee had to walk down a flight of 25 stairs and 200 feet across the production floor to get the attention of a co-worker for assistance.

Four willful violations involve not following OSHA's permit-required confined space regulations in the carbon dioxide tunnel room, including failing to ensure that workers isolated the carbon dioxide gas supply line and locked out power to the shackle line prior to entering the room to conduct cleaning activities, verify that electro-mechanical and atmospheric hazards within the room were eliminated prior to workers entering the space, test atmospheric conditions prior to allowing entry and provide an attendant during entries to the room. A willful violation is one committed with intentional, knowing or voluntary disregard for the law's requirements, or plain indifference to employee safety and health.

Seven serious violations involve failing to provide fall protection, provide rescue and emergency services equipment, develop procedures to summon rescue and emergency services, provide confined space entry procedures, prepare entry permits for the confined space, train employees and supervisors in entry permit procedures, and ensure that the entry supervisor performed required duties. A serious violation occurs when there is substantial probability that death or serious physical harm could result from a hazard about which the employer knew or should have known.

Based on the violations cited during this latest inspection, OSHA has proposed $318,000 in fines.

Jennie–O Turkey Store operates turkey growing and processing facilities in Minnesota and Wisconsin as well as national and international distribution systems. The company employs 1,200 workers at the Barron facility and 5,000 corporatewide.

Prior to this inspection, OSHA had inspected the Barron facility four times since 2004, resulting in citations for 12 violations.

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