MEC&F Expert Engineers : Tesoro refinery explosion penalty appeal hearing begins July 21, 2015. Seven workers died in the Tesoro refinery explosion on April 2, 2010, in Anacortes.

Saturday, July 18, 2015

Tesoro refinery explosion penalty appeal hearing begins July 21, 2015. Seven workers died in the Tesoro refinery explosion on April 2, 2010, in Anacortes.



July 17, 2015

Tumwater – A hearing is set to begin next week on Tesoro's appeal of safety and health violations and more than $2 million in fines related to one of Washington's worst-ever industrial disasters. An industrial appeals judge will hear arguments starting July 21 in Mount Vernon.

Seven workers, five men and two women, died in the Tesoro refinery explosion on April 2, 2010, in Anacortes. A six-month investigation by the Department of Labor & Industries (L&I) determined that the incident was preventable.

A heat exchanger at the petroleum refinery blew apart along cracks in welded areas. Tesoro was required by state law and industry standards to test the equipment for cracks, but L&I inspectors determined the company had failed to do this correctly. 

On Oct. 1, 2010, L&I cited Tesoro for 39 willful violations and five serious violations of state workplace safety and health regulations. The accompanying $2.39 million fine is the largest ever issued by L&I.

Tesoro filed an appeal on Oct. 22, 2010. In the five years since Tesoro appealed, numerous legal motions have led to delays in the hearing start date.
"The loss of seven lives was a needless tragedy for the families, the community and for our state," said Anne Soiza, assistant director of L&I's Division of Occupational Safety and Health. "Prevention of catastrophic chemical incidents is of paramount importance, and we continue to work diligently to that goal."

Under state law at the time, employers who appealed did not have to correct hazards until the appeal was final, a process that can take months, and sometimes years. That's changed now, in part because of this case. In 2011, the state legislature revised the law to require employers to correct hazards while an appeal is pending, rather than waiting for a final decision.

"Workers in the state are safer since the law was changed," said Soiza. "Employers have to step up and fix serious hazards, even if they appeal the violations, rather than putting it off for months or years until the appeal is final."

The appeal hearing is scheduled to begin Tuesday, July 21, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with a one-hour lunch break. It will continue the rest of the week, as well as July 28, July 30-31, and Aug. 25-28. Additional dates are scheduled for September through December. The hearing is scheduled to conclude Dec. 29.
The hearing will be held at the Days Inn Motel, 2009 Riverside Drive, in Mount Vernon.

The appeal will be heard by an industrial appeals judge, who will issue a proposed decision. The decision will be reviewed by the Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals (BIIA), which will issue a final order. The BIIA is a separate state agency independent of L&I. Its three board members are appointed by the Governor and include a business representative, a labor representative and a public member.
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For media information: Elaine Fischer, 360-902-5413.
Broadcast version:
 
A hearing is set to begin next week on Tesoro's appeal of safety and health violations and more than $2 million in fines related to one of Washington's worst-ever industrial disasters. An industrial appeals judge will hear arguments starting July 21 in Mount Vernon.


Seven workers died in the Tesoro refinery explosion on April 2, 2010, in Anacortes. An investigation by state Labor & Industries (L&I) determined that the explosion was preventable. A heat exchanger at the petroleum refinery blew apart along cracks in welded areas. L&I inspectors determined the company had failed to correctly perform required tests on the equipment. 

L&I cited Tesoro for 39 willful violations and five serious violations of state workplace safety and health regulations. The accompanying $2.39 million fine is the largest ever issued by L&I. In the five years since Tesoro appealed, numerous legal motions have led to delays in the hearing.



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Report: Tesoro Refinery Explosion Could Have Been Prevented


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MOUNT VERNON, Wash. — 

A deadly explosion in April at Tesoro Corp.'s oil refinery in Anacortes could have been prevented if the company had tested its equipment properly and followed other safety regulations, the Washington Department of Labor and Industries said Monday.



The department issued a record $2.38 million fine, the largest in the agency's history, against Tesoro, following a six-month investigation into state workplace safety and health regulations. It cited the company for 44 willful and serious violations of state workplace safety and health regulations.

Tesoro failed to check for cracks that had developed in the 40-year-old heat exchanger that ruptured April 2, killing seven workers at the refinery about 70 miles north of Seattle, the agency said. The cracks likely developed over the years, it said.

"This explosion and the deaths of these men and women would never have occurred had Tesoro tested their equipment in a manner consistent with standard industry practices, their own policies and state regulations," Labor and Industries Director Judy Schurke said in a statement.

The blast occurred as employees were doing maintenance on a unit that processes naphtha, a highly flammable chemical used to make finished petroleum products. The unit was being returned to service, a process that experts said is especially dangerous because the liquid is being heated to high temperatures at great pressure.

State officials said Monday that one of the heat exchangers split violently, releasing hydrocarbon vapor that ignited almost immediately. Federal investigators have said all seven victims were within 50 feet of the unit and had no chance of escaping.

In their investigation, state inspectors found that Tesoro disregarded numerous workplace safety rules, postponed maintenance, continued to operate failing equipment for numerous years, and failed to adequately protect its workers.
The agency cited the company for 39 willful violations, in which an employer knowingly violates a rule and is indifferent to correcting it; five violations were considered serious, defined as those with potential to cause death or serious physical injury.

The refinery plans to restart operations Wednesday and expects to be at full capacity by Oct. 15.

In a statement, the company's Senior Vice President, External Affairs, Lynn D. Westfall, said the company has done its own investigation and that it has "undertaken a review of equipment and piping at the refinery."

"We are working hard for a safe resumption of operations at Anacortes," Westfall's statement said.