Our Blog

Grain Bin Deaths – Fines Must be Kept High

March 27, 2013

This morning, NPR broadcast a story about deaths that occur across the County in grain bins. The details of the working conditions and the description of how workers die in grain bins was extremely unsettling.

As a former farmer, and now a personal injury attorney who still has a passion for agriculture, I believe working on a farm is worthwhile and satisfying work, however, employers must not be allowed to operate dangerous work sites.

NPR reported that employers will send untrained, unprotected workers into huge grain bins with shovels or pick axes to break apart kernels that get hung up on the walls and clog the bottom. Workers can get sucked down into the grain, causing them to essentially drown in corn. Their ears, noses and mouths fill causing an unimaginable, horrific death.

It is being reported that OSHA (the organization intended to protect workers) will cut fines 60% of the time in fatal grain incidents and that criminal prosecutions are very rare.

Employers must be discouraged from not only breaking laws but from further endangering workers. While there are responsible employers out there who put worker safety above all else, for the vast amount who do not, heavy fines and jail time should be a matter of course. Knowingly putting workers into dangerous working conditions is an outrage and should be punished. Heavily. OSHA should not be cutting fines for employers who run dangerous work sites.

Request Your Free Consultation

Get the answers and support you need. Our friendly and experienced Buffalo personal injury lawyers will take the time to understand your case, explain your options, and guide you every step of the way.

Our Practice Areas

Read More Articles

Ohio Court Finds Employment Agreement Unenforceable That Requires Attorney to Return 95% of Fees

CVS Expired Medication

The AAJ reported today that CVS is being sued by the Connecticut Attorney General for selling expired over-the-counter medications. An investigation revealed 20 or more stores selling such products in the state. The investigation showed that half of all stores investigated were selling the expired medication or other

Read Blog
Ohio Court Finds Employment Agreement Unenforceable That Requires Attorney to Return 95% of Fees

The illusion of safety with industry standards

ASTM International, a Pennsylvania-based group that sets voluntary safety standards, last week eliminated its guidelines for drop-side cribs, citing complaints about hardware failures,” as reported in the Bloomberg News on November 24.

Read Blog