UNITED STATES NEWS

OSHA issues $38K penalties in Fla. garage collapse

Apr 10, 2013, 6:57 PM

MIAMI (AP) – Five contracting companies have been penalized more than $38,000 combined for a series of errors and oversights that led to last October’s collapse of a college parking garage that killed four workers, federal safety regulators announced Wednesday.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration found evidence of missing welds and grout in some support columns, failure to properly brace columns and failure to inspect 18 columns as required. OSHA also said contractors didn’t follow project drawings and instructions.

The result, according to the citations, was a failure to provide a workplace “free from recognized hazards that were causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm to employees.”

The five-story, $20 million concrete garage at Miami Dade College’s west campus collapsed Oct. 10 in one of the county’s worst-ever workplace accidents. The body of one worker was not recovered for more than a week because the accident site was so unstable. The school’s 8,000 students had to attend classes on other Miami-Dade campuses until January. No students were injured in the collapse.

Several lawsuits have been filed by families of the dead workers seeking potentially millions of dollars in damages. The OSHA citations are likely to bolster their chances in court, their attorneys said.

“I think this shows what we’ve been saying all along, that this was an accident waiting to happen. Literally, a death trap,” said Ervin Gonzalez, who represents the families of two dead workers and one worker who was injured. Gonzalez added that evidence gathered so far shows the accident probably stemmed from a rush to finish the project.

The 1,855-space garage project involved use of pre-cast concrete construction, a common method in which massive concrete pieces are created off-site and slotted into place by workers often using large cranes. The first floor was to have office and classroom space.

The OSHA violations were labeled as serious, which under federal law allows for a maximum $7,000 penalty. The citations totaling $38,360 can be appealed to an OSHA commission.

The general contractor, Ajax Building Corp., was penalized $6,300 for not ensuring inspections were conducted and not adhering to project drawings.

“Ajax continues to actively cooperate with OSHA in its review through the informal conference process, and out of respect for that process we will reserve any comment until the review is concluded,” said Alia Faraj, a spokeswoman for the company.

The largest subcontractor penalty of $13,860 was imposed for two separate violations on Solar Erectors U.S. Inc. for the missing welds and grout and failure to brace several columns. A Solar Erectors official hung up when a reporter called for comment.

OSHA gave the contractors until April 25 to fix the problems it identified, but a decision still hasn’t been made by Miami Dade College on whether to salvage the garage or demolish it. Since returning to campus, students have been parking at a nearby mall and using shuttle buses.

“We’re still open to all options on the future of the existing structure,” said Miami Dade College spokesman Juan Mendieta.

The college itself was not named as a defendant in the lawsuits because it had not formally accepted the project, Gonzalez said.

_____

Follow Curt Anderson on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/Miamicurt

(Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

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OSHA issues $38K penalties in Fla. garage collapse