Tragic Death of Halliburton Employee Highlights Danger to Oil and Gas Workers
Dec 18, 2014
Washington, D.C. (Law Firm Newswire) December 18, 2014 – Recently, one man was killed and two were injured when a frozen high-pressure water line exploded at a hydraulic fracking site near Mead, CO.
Investigators from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) have begun an investigation. An OSHA spokesperson noted that the oil and gas industry is notoriously dangerous for workers. According to records from the U.S. Department of Labor, the oil and gas sector has had more fatalities in recent years than other sectors traditionally considered dangerous, including manufacturing, construction and agriculture.
“The workers were out there trying to solve a problem in unusual conditions,” remarked David Lietz, an industrial accident attorney, referring to the extreme cold that the area had been experiencing. “The question is whether the company that owns the rig did everything in its power to ensure the workers’ safety under those extreme conditions.”
While no one has died previously while working at the site of the accident, OSHA investigators are trying to find out if the accident could have been prevented.
The domestic energy industry is booming, and many worry that safety is not a top concern for companies that are rushing to grab profits. The Houston Chronicle reported that OSHA investigators found safety violations in 78 percent of the oil and gas accidents it investigated in 2012. A recent OSHA report blasted the federal government for failing to implement adequate oil safety standards for drilling operations.
“Hopefully, this death will help call attention to what is clearly an ongoing crisis in worker safety in this industry,” said Lietz. “These companies have a responsibility to keep workers safe, and they should not need OSHA or federal regulations in order to take that responsibility seriously.”
Learn more at http://www.lietzlaw.com/
The Lietz Law Firm
888 16th Street NW
Suite 800
Washington, DC 20006
Call: 202.349.9869
- Trucking Regulators to Require Electronic Logs on Commercial Trucks
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) recently proposed a new rule that would require most commercial trucks and buses to be equipped with electronic devices that record the duration of time the vehicles are driven. The federal government sets limits on how many hours commercial bus and truck drivers may be behind the wheel […] - Five Injured as New York City Bus Crashes Into Minivan, Building
Five people were injured when a New York City bus collided with a vehicle, careened onto a sidewalk and crashed into a building. The accident occurred on the morning of April 4, 2014 on Broadway near West 155th Street in Washington Heights. According to Metropolitan Transit Authority spokesman Kevin Ortiz, witnesses stated that a minivan […] - NHTSA proposes side impact test for child car seats
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) recently proposed upgrades to the safety standards governing child restraint systems. The proposal includes a first-ever side impact test for child car seats sold in the United States. The proposed test simulates a “T-bone” crash, in which a small passenger vehicle traveling at 15 mph is impacted from […]