Tuesday, July 3, 2018

Sanitation worker Barry Miller of Summerhill, 19, with Pro Disposal, was killed after being trapped between a garbage truck and a dumpster in Cambria County, PA




JOHNSTOWN, Pa. - 

A sanitation worker was killed Monday after being trapped between a garbage truck and a dumpster in Cambria County.

Cambria County Coroner Jeff Lees identified the victim as 19-year-old Barry Miller of Summerhill. Lees said Miller had been working at the job for a little over a year.

According to dispatch officials, Miller was trapped between a garbage truck and a dumpster on Gilbert Street by the ACRP building in Brownstown Borough around 6:40 a.m.
Officials said he was taken to Conemaugh Memorial Medical Center.

Cambria County Coroner Jeff Lees pronounced him dead at the hospital. Lees said Miller died of a head injury and ruled the death accidental. 

The garbage truck is marked as a Pro Disposal truck.

West Hills police and OSHA are investigating.

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Welcome to Pro Disposal

Family owned and locally operated, Pro Disposal Inc. has been providing quality waste management services and garbage pickup at an affordable cost. For over three generations, Pro Disposal Inc. has been a leader in customer satisfaction in Altoona and Johnstown as well as throughout the counties of Cambria, Blair, Northern Somerset, Bedford, Westmoreland and Indiana, PA.

Whether your service needs are commercial, industrial, or residential we have you covered. Contact us today for your waste management needs and discover why we truly are “Pros” at disposal!

Second construction worker, Filiberto Morales, 36, of Round Rock, Texas, died in the explosion at Coryell Memorial Hospital in Gatesville, Texas.








2nd Worker Dies From Injuries in Texas Hospital Explosion
July 2, 2018
 

A second worker has died from an explosion at a Central Texas hospital that left more than a dozen injured.

Police reported the death of 36-year-old Filiberto Morales of Round Rock, Texas, who died June 28 after being injured in an explosion on June 26 at Coryell Memorial Hospital in Gatesville. Police say Morales was working at the construction site.


Authorities have reported that more than a dozen construction workers were hurt from the explosion and that most had burn and blast injuries. Police also identified the first person killed by the explosion as 44-year-old Michael Bruggman of Rogers, south of Temple.

Witnesses said an electric generator inside an uncompleted hospital expansion exploded, spreading shrapnel. Yet, Dave Byrom, the hospital’s chief executive, said the blast possibly started with a gas line.
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We are deeply saddened by the event that occurred Tuesday, June 26th, at our job site at Coryell Memorial Hospital in Gatesville, Texas.  Today we are mourning the loss of a valued LPI family member in addition to offering our prayers and support to others who were injured, wishing them a speedy recovery.  Right now, our priority is to provide any manner of support possible to valuable members of LPI, along with their families.  As an active member in the Central Texas community, we take seriously any event that impacts the lives of Central Texans, and we are dedicated to helping our Lochridge-Priest family move forward.

WACO, Texas (KWTX)

A candlelight vigil is scheduled this weekend for Michael Bruggman, 43, of Rogers, the Lochridge-Priest worker killed in the Gatesville hospital explosion, which left 15 other workers injured, some critically.

The vigil begins at 8 p.m. Saturday at The Lakes at Central Pointe at 4001 Central Pointe Parkway in Temple.

A source close to the investigation said Bruggman was installing an air conditioning unit on top of the building at the time of the explosion Tuesday afternoon.

Bruggman was a Temple native who graduated in 1992 from Academy High School and went on to attend Sam Houston State University.

A memorial service for Bruggman begins at 11 a.m. Monday at the Dossman Funeral Home Chapel at 2525 North Main St. in Belton.

Visitation begins at 10 a.m. Monday at the funeral home.

Five other Lochridge-Priest employees were injured in the explosion, the company said in a press release Thursday.

They and Bruggman were among 15 Lochridge-Priest workers on site at the time of the explosion Tuesday afternoon.

The other nine employees weren't hurt.

Adolfson & Peterson Construction, the general contractor for the project, issued a statement Wednesday in which it said Bruggman and the 15 injured workers were all employees of Lochridge-Priest and were working near the central utility plant building when the explosion occurred.

It wasn’t clear Thursday afternoon by whom the other injured workers are employed.

The company says it’s focused on making sure that its workers and their families are provided with all possible support and is working to determine whether “protocols were followed during this incident.”

“First and foremost, our priority is to provide any manner of support possible to our valued LPI family, along with their loved-ones. As an active member in the Central Texas community, we take seriously any event that impacts the lives of Central Texans, and we are dedicated to helping our Lochridge-Priest family to move forward. Please pray for us,” said Skip Burch, president of Lochridge-Priest, Inc.

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Lochridge-Priest, Inc is a family owned and operated company that has served the Central Texas area for over 50 years. We are the largest provider of residential, commercial and industrial heating and air-conditioning services, as well as, plumbing services in Central Texas. We have recently expanded our electrical and building automation service areas. We have our own engineering team and a sheet metal shop, Advanced Sheet Metal. With over 400 employees, we are dedicated to serving your home, business, and industrial comfort needs. We work as a team to deliver best in class service to our customers.
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Officials release name of construction worker who died in Gatesville explosion


By Emily Hilley-Sierzchula | Herald staff writer
June 27, 2018

UPDATE 2:30 p.m.: Four of the injured construction workers who initially were sent to Baylor Scott & White Medical Center in Temple were transferred to Dell Seton Medical Center at the University of Texas, according to a Seton official on Tuesday.

UDPATE 1:15 p.m.: The general contractor for the expansion at Coryell Memorial Hospital confirmed the construction firm on site during Tuesday's explosion as Lochridge-Priest, of Temple.

A representative from Richardson-based Adolfson & Peterson Construction said a crew from Lochridge-Priest was working on site at the time of the incident near the central utility plant where the explosion occurred.

All 15 injured workers and the one man killed during the incident were employed by Lochridge-Priest. There were no reported injuries to Adolfson & Peterson staff.

A representative from Lochridge-Priest declined to comment.

“Our team is deeply saddened by this tragedy and we are working closely with our partners at Coryell Memorial and Lochridge-Priest to provide support during this time," said Corbett Nichter, president of the Gulf States Region of Adolfson & Peterson. "Our sincere condolences, thoughts and prayers are with the families and friends of those injured and lost.”

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Update 11:52 a.m.: Officials released the name of the construction worker who died as Michael Bruggman, 44, of Rogers.

Media outlets are reporting one of the 15 construction workers, Aaron Haveron, was in critical condition Wednesday in Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas. He's the pastor of a United Pentecostal Church in Marlin.

Parkland reported one other man injured in the blast was also admitted to the Dallas hospital.

Coryell Memorial Hospital released a phone number, 254-404-2500, for families to reach the hospital.

Ambulance services in Gatesville are running but the emergency room and all other wings of the hospital are still closed. Those in need of emergency services should call 911, and an ambulance can take them to hospitals in Waco or Temple, officials said.

At a press conference at 11:45 a.m., Gatesville Police Chief Nathan Gohlke said "We are focusing the investigation on the debris field in and around the explosion site. We also will be assessing damages to the hospital and nursing home facilities there at that location with full intent of releasing those unaffected portions back to the hospital's control within the very near future."

Structural engineers are at the site today assessing the damage, Gohlke said.

"The outpouring of support for this incident has been incredible, and we certainly want to thank everyone for bringing us food, water toiletries and other needed supplies," Gohlke said.

Gohlke is asking the community to be patient, and wants to bring the hospital and services back on line as soon as possible.

Coryell Memorial Hospital CEO David Byrom said: "I'm surrounded by heroes where I work. It's very impressive."

Byrom described what happened after the blast:

"Probably within five minutes of the event, my staff had that building nearly completely empty. And for the victims of that, our physicians and nurses were already responding, and I had staff that was helping bring folks out of the rubble. They had triage centers set up on the ground. We were working that. "

The triage likely minimized some of the injuries, said, adding, then patients "were transported very rapidly."
Bob Harrell, the Coryell County emergency coordinator, said the hospital's
acute care hospital, emergency room, nursing facility and assisted living
are not open today.

The hospital's home health system and rural health clinic in Goldthwaite are open, he said.

"So our focus is getting those services back on line," he said. "Probably starting with our emergency room, which also means that our lab, radiology departments need to come back online, getting our clinics back open, then certainly focused on bringing our residents home."

Law enforcement from around Central Texas have been busy securing the scene of the explosion as investigators were searching through the rubble Wednesday morning at Coryell Memorial Hospital in Gatesville.

“They’re gathering evidence to find out what happened, and they’re not ready to start cleaning up yet,” said Sgt. David Roberts, Department of Public Safety public information officer, on Wednesday morning.

Roberts said the Gatesville Police Department is taking the lead at the scene and that DPS and other state and federal agencies are in a supporting role.

An explosion ripped through a Coryell Memorial Hospital construction site Tuesday afternoon, killing one and injuring 15 — all construction workers, according to hospital officials. No patients or staff at the hospital were injured. On Tuesday, officials said 12 were injured, but they revised that number to 15 today.

The blast, which was suspected to have been caused by a gas leak, occurred about 2:45 p.m. knocked out power to about 900 homes and businesses in the city and led to the evacuation of the hospital and three on-campus care facilities.

Power was fully restored to the town Tuesday night, with the exception of the hospital, officials said this morning.

Roberts said the investigation will take some time.

“It’s nowhere near the scale of West (fertilizer plant explosion in 2013) but it is still a tragic event so they’ll take their time investigating to ensure they are thorough and come to a proper conclusion,” Roberts said. “The best you can do is support those involved, which is what the Gatesville community is doing.”

Roberts said he saw how the community came together.

“Yesterday I saw a huge outpouring of help by the community,” he said. “People showed up in droves to assist in evacuations and in caretaking roles.”

All patients who were in the hospital were transferred to Goodall-Witcher Hospital in Clifton, according to the Coryell Memorial Hospital Facebook page.

All long-term care and assistant living residents from the Gatesville hospital "have now been placed in the following for temporary care: Hillside Medical Lodge; Lutheran Sunset Ministries, Clifton; and Westview Manor, McGregor,” the post said. “Many of our staff went to join our residents overnight to assist in their care, and provide a source of comfort and consistency.”

“Emergency Medical Services and Coryell Home Health have continued to operate, and DaVita Dialysis will resume treating patients in the morning. The rest of the campus will be closed including; the hospital, Coryell Medical Clinic, and the emergency room (ER),” according to the Facebook page. The dialysis center across the street from the hospital in Gatesville is open, officials said Wednesday.

The Texas State Fire Marshal’s Office is involved in the investigation but could not provide details until after the investigation is over, a spokesman said on Wednesday morning.

“They are there to conduct an origin and cause investigation,” said Jerry Hagins, spokesman with Texas Department of Insurance. The State Fire Marshal’s Office is part of the department.

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Lochridge-Priest to review policies, support employees affected by Gatesville Explosion.  Toolate for Michael Bruggman, who was killed in the massive explosion.


"As an active member in the Central Texas community, we take seriously any event that impacts the lives of Central Texans, and we are dedicated to helping our Lochridge-Priest family to move forward," Lochrich-Preist President Skip Burch said. Unless of course they ask for money.






Author: Brandon Gray
Published: 3:34 PM CDT June 28, 2018
Updated: 4:05 PM CDT June 28, 2018

Lochridge-Priest said they are supporting the families and loved ones of their employees affected by Tuesday’s fatal explosion at Coryell Memorial Hospital in Gatesville, the company announced Thursday.

Lochridge-Preist President Skip Burch said their priority is to provide any manner of support possible to their valued LPI family along with their loved ones.

“As an active member in the Central Texas community, we take seriously any event that impacts the lives of Central Texans, and we are dedicated to helping our Lochridge-Priest family to move forward,” Burch said.

The company went on to say in a press release that moving forward, their decisions will focus on ensuring the irreplaceable members of the company, along with their families, are provided with all possible support. The will continue to be active and engaged in the Central Texas community by providing and organizing resources for those affected by the blast, the company stated.

Lochridge-Priest state the nature of their work at times involves inherent risks, which is why safety their top priority.

Fifteen workers were at the scene of the explosion, six being Lochrich-Priest employees. One of the LPI Employees died and the five others were injured. The other workers injured were not LPI employees, a spokesperson said.

The company is currently reviewing all policies to ensure protocols were followed during this incident and are hopeful the investigation findings will aid them in preventing any future accidents.

Two women were killed and three others injured in a collision between a red pick-up truck and a car on Route 37, in Toms River, New Jersey after the small gray sedan sped onto the highway without braking at the stop sign













Monday, July 02, 2018

TOMS RIVER, New Jersey (WABC) --

Two people were killed and three others injured in a two-vehicle collision in New Jersey early Monday afternoon.

The crash between a red pickup truck and a gray car happened just after 12:30 p.m. in the eastbound lanes of Route 37, at Hospital Drive, in Toms River.

The truck ended up on its side.

Two women in the car were pronounced dead at the scene, while a third woman in the car was rushed to Jersey Shore Medical Center in critical condition.

A fourth woman in the car and the male driver of the pickup truck were taken to Community Medical Center with non-life threatening injuries.

The cause of the accident is under investigation, but a witness says the truck was traveling eastbound, while the car was turning onto the highway from a medical complex.

"I had my right turn signal on, and I was turning in here," Alex Lukacs said. "And all the sudden, right in front of me, the car just flew straight out into the traffic. And that pickup truck struck them."

The victims' identities and ages have not been released.



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Two dead, three injured in serious crash on Route 37 in Toms River
Kathleen Hopkins and Ken Serrano, Asbury Park Press 


July 2, 2018

TOMS RIVER, NEW JERSEY - 


Two women were killed, and three more people were injured, one critically, in a collision shortly after noon on Route 37, west of the Garden State Parkway, by Hospital Drive, police said.

A full-size, red pickup truck and a grey sedan were left mangled when the vehicles collided in the eastbound lanes of Route 37, west of the Garden State Parkway, at the entrance to the Riverwood Plaza medical office complex, which is adjacent to Community Medical Center.


Two women in the sedan were killed, and a third woman in the car was critically injured and transported to Jersey Shore University Medical Center, Neptune, Sgt. Ron Sermarini said. 



A fourth woman in the sedan and the male driver of the pickup truck were taken for treatment to Community Medical Center, Sermarini said.

The crash was reported at 12:12 p.m.

The mangled pickup truck lay on its passenger side, its windshield shattered. It appears the roof was cut off of the sedan, which was covered by a blue tarp.

Personnel from the medical examiner's office were at the scene.

The eastbound lanes of Route 37 were closed as investigators worked the crash the scene, Sermarini said. Traffic was being diverted onto Hospital Drive and Lakehurst Road, causing significant backups.

Alex Lukacs, 60, of Manchester, a tech worker, described to police and then to the Press what he saw as he was heading east on Route 37 and turned into the plaza entrance right at what was about to become the accident scene.

The small gray sedan sped onto the highway without braking at the stop sign, he said.

“I just saw that car fly straight into the traffic,” Lukacs said. “The red truck was in the passing lane.”

The crash “was tremendous,” he said. “I won’t forget that for a while.”

Lucacs said he went to help another man who was leading one of the victims out of the passenger side of the sedan. They set her down on a wooden box that he believes blew out of the bed of the pickup truck, he said.

The pick-up truck belongs to Joseph M. Sanzari Inc., a highway and heavy construction company based in Hackensack.
A pickup truck that collided with a sedan on Route 37 Eastbound, east of Hospital Drive, is back on it’s wheels Monday afternoon, July 2, 2018. Two women who were in the sedan were killed in the collision. (Photo: Thomas P. Costello)

Joseph Sanzari, the chief operating officer of the company, said it is still learning details of the accident. He declined to discuss the driver, adding that the company is fully cooperating with the Ocean County Prosecutor’s Office.

Employer's fined by OSHA for worker fatalities and injuries


Ohio Excavating Company Cited Following Fatal Trench Collapse
Ohio
JK Excavating & Utilities, Inc., faces $202,201 in penalties and was placed in OSHA’s Severe Violator Enforcement Program after an employee suffered fatal injuries in a trench collapse. Inspectors found that the company failed to: use protective systems to prevent a cave-in; remove accumulating water; properly use ladders to enter and exit the trench; prevent employees from working beneath a suspended trench box; ensure employees wore hard hats; and make provisions for prompt medical attention in the event of injury. Read the news release for more information.

Florida Roofing Company Faces Penalties After Exposing Employees to Fall and Other Safety Hazards
Florida
Crown Roofing, LLC, was fined $149,662 for exposing employees to fall hazards. After being inspected as part of OSHA’s Regional Emphasis Program for Falls in Construction, the company was cited for one repeat violation for failing to use a guardrail, safety net, or personal fall arrest system to protect workers. OSHA also issued citations for failing to have a competent person regularly inspect jobsites, materials, and equipment; and maintain written records of fall protection trainings. For more information, read the news release.

Virginia Cites Nestle USA Following Serious Worker Injury
Virginia
The Virginia Occupational Safety and Health Program issued seven citations and $187,060 in penalties to Nestle USA after a worker’s arm became caught in a conveyor. Inspectors determined that the company failed to inspect energy control procedures annually, train workers on the control of hazardous energy, and provide adequate machine guarding. Nestle USA was also cited for these violations in 2016.

Michigan Cites Contractor for Exposing Workers to Fall Hazards
Michigan
Michigan OSHA issued five citations and $77,600 in penalties to Woods Carpentry, Inc., for exposing workers to fall hazards. Inspectors concluded that the company failed to train workers, and provide adequate fall protection for workers installing guardrails on balconies. The company was previously cited for these violations in 2014 and 2016.

Hundreds Stand Down for Trench Safety in Missouri


Hundreds Stand Down for Trench Safety in Missouri
Eric Giguere shares his experience of surviving a trench collapse.
Eric Giguere shares his experience of surviving a trench collapse.
During last month’s Trench Safety Stand-Down Week, more than 600 construction workers gathered outside Kauffman Stadium in Kansas City, Mo., to learn about safe excavation practices. Speakers at the event included Eric Giguere, who described surviving a trench collapse, and how it affected his life. Presenters also discussed other excavation hazards, the increase in trench-related fatalities, and preventive measures. For more information, visit OSHA’s trenching and excavation webpage.

OSHA is urging employers across the country to protect workers from heat-related illnesses and hazards.





OSHA Focuses on Worker Heat Hazards
OSHA Focuses on Worker Heat Hazards
With the official start of summer, OSHA is urging employers across the country to protect workers from heat-related illnesses and hazards. While workers in construction, agriculture, and landscaping are often exposed to excessive heat, so are workers in kitchens, foundries, warehouses, and other indoor settings. OSHA offers guidance on how to keep workers cool and healthy whether they are exposed to indoor or outdoor heat hazards.