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Inspection Detail

Inspection: 108962507 - The Atlanta Coca Cola Bottling Company

Inspection Information - Office: Atlanta West Area Office

 

Inspection Nr: 108962507
Report ID: 0418200
Date Opened: 02/06/1994

Site Address:
The Atlanta Coca Cola Bottling Company
4755 Edison Drive
College Park, GA 30337

Mailing Address:
, , 00000

Union Status: NonUnion

SIC:2086

NAICS: 0 


Inspection Type: Accident

Scope: Partial

Advanced Notice: Y

Ownership: Private

Safety/Health: Safety

Close Conference: 02/17/1994

Emphasis:

Case Closed: 04/12/1994


Related Activity
Type Activity Nr Safety Health
Accident 360823561
Violation Summary
Violations/Penalties Serious Willful Repeat Other Unclass Total
Initial Violations 4 4
Current Violations 4 4
Initial Penalty $11,700 $0 $0 $0 $0 $11,700
Current Penalty $10,075 $0 $0 $0 $0 $10,075
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 19100147 C04 I 03/09/1994 03/17/1994 $4,500 $4,500 $0 I - Informal Settlement  
2. 01002 Serious 19100147 C07 I 03/09/1994 03/17/1994 $900 $1,800 $0 I - Informal Settlement  
3. 01003 Serious 19100147 C07 IV 03/09/1994 04/01/1994 $675 $900 $0 I - Informal Settlement  
4. 01004 Serious 19100212 A01 03/09/1994 04/08/1994 $4,000 $4,500 $0 I - Informal Settlement  

Investigation Summary

Investigation Nr: 922435
Event: 02/05/1994
Employee killed when crushed between forklift and palletizer

It appears that on the evening of February 5, 1994, Employee #1, a maintenance mechanic for the Atlanta Coca Cola Bottling Company, was trying to clear a pallet jammed on a fork car from the left side of the car, where there was only an 8 in. clearance. As a result, the employee was crushed at mid-chest level between the left fork car mast and the frame of a palletizer. He was facing toward the back of the machine and leaning slightly forward and to the right with his left arm toward the conveyor and his right arm outside the machine. The fork car control panel was in the automatic mode and two pallets remained on the infeed conveyor. Employee and management interviews revealed that the bottom pallet on a stack would frequently become jammed by the forks on the fork car and that the employees would routinely clear the jammed pallets by hitting or moving the pallet. This was generally done without changing the machine's mode from automatic to manual. The coworker who found Employee #1's body stated that they were waiting to change over to the adjacent palletizer and that was probably why Employee #1 was at the machine. There were no witnesses to the actual accident, but circumstances support the coworker's statement. The position of Employee #1's body when discovered also supports this finding. Why he would have been clearing a jam from the left side instead of the right is unknown; if he had been on the right side, he most likely would not have been injured. Most employees stated that they would have cleared the jam from the right side of the car because there was more room. With the forks jammed against the pallet, 1,350 psi of hydraulic pressure would have been trying to push the cart forward and when the jam cleared the pressure would have been released and the cart would have moved forward rapidly, crushing the employee.

Keywords: WORK RULES, JAMMED, CAUGHT BETWEEN, CRUSHED, INDUSTRIAL TRUCK, PALLET, PRESSURE RELEASE, MACHINE--MISC

Investigated Inspection
# Inspection Age Sex Degree of Injury Nature of Injury Occupation
1 108962507 Fatality Asphyxia Occupation not reported
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