Thursday, December 28, 2017

Lumber mill worker Jeffrey M. Midstokke, 55, died as he was working on a debarker machine at the Guy Bennett Lumber Co. mill near Clarkston, WA when he fell 16 feet onto a chain conveyor system








Coroner finds port of Wilma mill worker died of head, neck injuries






PORT OF WILMA, WA - The 55-year-old Peck man who died in an industrial accident at Guy Bennett Lumber at the Port of Wilma suffered massive head and neck injuries, according to the Whitman County coroner.



Jeffrey Midstokke "fell approximately 16 feet from the area of debarker to a chain conveyor system, striking his head, transporting the decedent along the conveyor system until turned off by a metal detector," according to the unofficial death record provided by coroner Peter J. Martin.



Martin determined the manner of death was accidental. The incident occurred Dec. 20. Midstokke was pronounced dead at the scene when emergency crews arrived.

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A worker fell to his death last week at a lumber mill near Clarkston.

Local authorities reported Jeffrey M. Midstokke, 55, was working on a debarker machine at the Guy Bennett Lumber Co. mill when he fell on the morning of Dec. 20.

A post-autopsy report from the Whitman County coroner said Midstokke fell about 16 feet onto a “chain conveyor system,” which transported his body until the system was automatically shut down by a metal detector – a safety feature designed to prevent saw blades from hitting errant nails and metal fragments in pieces of wood.

The coroner’s report said Midstokke fell at 10:35 a.m. and died almost immediately of head and spine injuries. It lists the manner of death as an accident.

Midstokke was married and had lived in Peck, Idaho, for nine years.

Elaine Fischer, a spokeswoman for the state Department of Labor and Industries, said the agency is conducting an investigation into the incident that could take several months.

“It can take a while when it involves a fatality,” Fischer said.

Founded in 1939, Bennett Lumber owns two mills – one in Princeton, Idaho, and one in the Port of Wilma on the Snake River, just across from Clarkston.

A statement on the company’s website said the “ultramodern” Clarkston facility, where Midstokke died, went into operation in the early 1990s. Labor and Industries records say the mill employs 76 to 100 workers.

Fischer said the agency hasn’t had a reason to conduct a safety inspection there in at least a decade.

The mill’s general manager, Mitch Dimke, did not respond to a message seeking comment on Wednesday.

This is at least the second fatal accident at an Inland Northwest lumber mill in recent months. In September, 45-year-old Robert Billingsley was fatally injured while clearing a piece of wood from a machine at Merritt Brothers Lumber Co. in Athol.

That incident is under investigation by the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration.