Washington Contractor Fined $248K After Worker Fell to Death from Bridge

January 31, 2022

A Bellingham, Washington, construction company is facing nearly $284,000 in fines for not ensuring safeguards were in place to keep workers from falling off the Beverly Railroad bridge spanning the Columbia River in Vantage.

A 39-year-old man fell roughly 60 feet from the bridge deck to the ground below last August while laying concrete curing blankets as part of a bridge restoration project.

The Washington Department of Labor & Industries cited Boss Construction Inc. with two egregious serious willful violations for not ensuring workers were using fall protection. State inspectors determined that many of the workers did not use fall protection on the day of the incident and on multiple other days.

Multiple employee interviews reportedly corroborated the lack of fall protection during the project and spoke to a lack of safety enforcement leading up to the fatal fall.

L&I inspectors reportedly observed a catenary line—a horizontal line anchored at each end that workers can attach to for safety—installed on only one side of the bridge deck. The line spanned roughly 2,600 feet, but did not span the entire 3,052 feet of the bridge, leaving roughly 200 feet on each end on one side of the bridge without a line for workers to attach to as they walked on the bridge.

The other side of the bridge had no catenary line and was completely unguarded for the full span. Guardrails had been removed several months prior to the incident leaving a flat, unguarded surface, according to L&I.

L&I also cited Boss Construction for not having a rescue boat immediately available and not having ring buoys with ropes or life vests that are required for workers not using fall protection while working over water.

Boss Construction has until Feb. 8 to appeal the citation and fines. Money paid as a result of a citation goes into the workers’ compensation supplemental pension fund, helping injured workers and families of those who have died on the job.

Topics Washington Contractors

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