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United States Department of Energy
Office of Public Affairs
Washington, DC 20585
NEWS MEDIA CONTACT:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Joann Wardrip, (202) 586-4940
Thursday, March 20, 2008
DOE Cites Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC for Worker Safety and Health Violations
WASHINGTON, DC – The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) today issued a Preliminary
Notice of Violation (PNOV) to Battelle Energy Alliance, LLC (BEA) for violations of the
Department’s worker safety and health regulations. BEA is the managing and operating
contractor for DOE’s Idaho National Laboratory (INL), located approximately 40 miles west
of Idaho Falls, Idaho. Today’s PNOV is the first worker safety and health enforcement
action under DOE’s Worker Safety and Health rule that went into effect last February.
The PNOV cites a series of violations related to two events affecting worker
safety and heath that occurred at INL in 2007. Violations include failures to
identify and assess workplace hazards; establish controls to prevent and abate
hazards; provide adequate training and information; adhere to procedures; and
comply with fire protection and emergency response requirements. DOE elected to
take contract action against BEA to constitute a penalty for the violations. The
DOE Idaho Operations Office reduced BEA’s fee for fiscal year 2007 by $250,000
for these events in the contractor’s end-of-year performance evaluation.
The first event occurred in June 2007 when a fire occurred within a chemical
fume hood where a worker was pouring finely-powdered red phosphorus from a
plastic bag into a metal canister and the red phosphorus ignited. The chemist
involved in this incident received minor burns to a hand and other workers were
treated for exposure to smoke from the fire and cleared to work following
medical examinations. Damage from the fire was limited to the fume hood. The
second event occurred in July 2007 when two INL firefighters - responding to a
wildland fire - were shocked by electrical energy from a sagging overhead power
transmission line. Their emergency response vehicle, which was supplying water
to their hoselines, was parked in close proximity to the power line and
electrical energy traveled through heavy smoke to their vehicle, shocking the
firefighters. One firefighter involved in this incident received sufficient
energy from the shock to knock the individual to the ground and the other
firefighter experienced muscle contractions that prevented him from releasing
the fire hose. Both firefighters were cleared to work without medical
restrictions following a medical examination.
The Bob Stump National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2003
authorizes the Energy Department to take regulatory actions under 10 C.F.R. Part
851, Worker Safety and Health Program, against DOE contractors for violations of
its worker safety and health requirements. DOE’s Enforcement Program encourages
Departmental contractors to identify and correct worker safety and health
deficiencies at an early stage, before they contribute to or result in more
serious events.
Additional details on this and other enforcement actions are available at:
www.hss.doe.gov/enforce.
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