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Inspection Detail

Inspection: 308298132 - Tamko Roofing Products, Inc.

Inspection Information - Office: Department Of Labor, Licensing, And Regulation Division Of Labor And Industry Maryland Occupational Safety And Health

 

Inspection Nr: 308298132
Report ID: 0352450
Date Opened: 11/02/2004

Site Address:
Tamko Roofing Products, Inc.
4500 Tamko Drive
Frederick, MD 21703

Mailing Address:
, , 00000

Union Status: NonUnion

SIC:2952

NAICS: 324122/Asphalt Shingle and Coating Materials Manufacturing


Inspection Type: Accident

Scope: Partial

Advanced Notice: N

Ownership: Private

Safety/Health: Safety

Close Conference: 11/02/2004

Planning Guide: Safety-Manufacturing

Emphasis: N:Amputate, S:Amputations Const. & Man., S:Crushed-By, S:General Ind. Fatalities, S:Struck-By

Case Closed: 06/28/2005


Related Activity
Type Activity Nr Safety Health
Accident 102356789
Violation Summary
Violations/Penalties Serious Willful Repeat Other Unclass Total
Initial Violations 1 1
Current Violations 1 1
Initial Penalty $4,300 $0 $0 $0 $0 $4,300
Current Penalty $1,000 $0 $0 $0 $0 $1,000
FTA Penalty $0 $0 $0 $0 $0 $0

Violation Items
# Citation ID Citaton Type Standard Cited Issuance Date Abatement Due Date Current Penalty Initial Penalty FTA Penalty Contest Latest Event Note
1. 01001 Serious 19100212 A01 12/28/2004 01/03/2005 $1,000 $4,300 $0 01/12/2005 F - Formal Settlement  

Investigation Summary

Investigation Nr: 202354668
Event: 11/02/2004
Employee Injured When Pinned Between Table and Conveyor

Employee #1 was the acting lead man for felt line Number 3 from the winding machine to the palletizer machine. This section of the line delivers finished roofing paper and winds it into rolls. The rolls then travel onto a conveyor system and are carried to the accumulator table. The rolls accumulate on the table, six at a time. The accumulator table cycles by means of electronic eyes and operates under hydraulics. Once the sixth roll hits the table, it triggers the conveyor to stop and the table to upend and dump the finished rolls onto a pallet which is in the palletizer machine. This machine wraps the finished product and the pallets are moved to storage areas by way of forklift. Employee #1 had relieved a coworker for break and was performing his duties at the accumulator table and roll pallatizer. Employee #1 noticed that the conveyor had not stopped until it had sent seven rolls onto the accumulator table. Evidently, this malfunction occurs about every 10 minutes when smaller 200 square-ft rolls of roofing paper are being run on the line. Common practice was for the operator in this area to shove the extra roll onto the floor at the opposite side of the accumulator table. Employee #1 pushed the seventh roll, but it did not go onto the floor. It did, however, clear the electronic beam and cause the table to upend. When the table upended, the roll still remained on the table. Employee #1 then climbed up between the conveyor and accumulator table and pushed the roll onto the floor. The roll cleared another electronic beam and prompted the table to cycle back to its home position, which was down. Employee #1 became pinned between the table and the conveyor at chest level. Since the accumulator table had not returned to its home position, it kept constant pressure on Employee #1's chest and he could not breathe. A coworker witnessed the event and pulled the emergency stop on the line. Maintenance personnel had to be called to bleed the hydraulic pressure off the accumulator table so Employee #1 could be freed. Employee #1 remained pinned for a period of approximately 5 minutes. Employee #1 received serious chest injuries and asphyxiation for approximately 3minutes to 4 minutes. Employee #1 was hospitalized.

Keywords: CHEST, ASPHYXIATED, PINNED, CONVEYOR

Investigated Inspection
# Inspection Age Sex Degree of Injury Nature of Injury Occupation
1 308298132 Hospitalized injury Asphyxia Laborers, except construction
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