MEC&F Expert Engineers

Wednesday, June 13, 2018

Baltimore City, MD has suspended its contract with the company R.F. Warder Inc., after one of its employees, 19-year-old Kyle Hancock, buried alive after unshored trench collapse in Clifton Park, MD last week

20-year-old construction worker Kyle Hancock buried alive after unshored trench collapse in Clifton Park, MD



BALTIMORE, MD (WBFF) -



Baltimore City, MD has suspended its contract with the company R.F. Warder Inc., after one of its employees, 19-year-old Kyle Hancock, died in a trench collapse last week.

Mayor Catherine Pugh's spokesperson James Bentley confirmed Monday the city's contract with the company has been suspended.

Funeral services for Kyle Hancock were held over the weekend in Glen Burnie. 


==========================


20-year-old construction worker Kyle Hancock burried alive after unshored trench collapse in Clifton Park, MD
























Construction Worker Recovered From Baltimore Trench Identified
June 6, 2018


BALTIMORE, MD (WJZ)– After an hours-long effort, first responders recover a construction worker who was trapped in a trench in Clifton Park.

Officials were at the park located near Sinclair Lane and Chester Street in northeast Baltimore, where they finally recovered 20-year-old Kyle Hancock just after 1:30 a.m. Wednesday, after nearly 12 hours of rescue efforts.


The construction company that was onsite was R.F. Warder Inc.

Construction crews were working from Tuesday afternoon to recover the body. Hancock was buried alive when dirt collapsed on top of him as he was working.


“It appears that the hole the worker was inside, it was not properly shored up,” said Baltimore Fire Spokesperson Blair Skinner.

If someone is working four feet or deeper it is required that temporary walls are built or a metal box is put down to protect anybody working that deep. The hole in question was 14 feet deep.

The cause of the collapse is under investigation.


However, the scenes from the site show that the trench was unshored.  What makes this reckless violation even more reckless is the fact that there is water at the bottom of the trench.  The presence of the water makes the slopes and the ground even more unstable and subject to movement.

The company that allowed this to happen need to go out of business and jailed for life.

===========================

BALTIMORE, MD (ABC7) — A 19-year-old construction worker is dead after he was buried over 15 feet underground Tuesday and crews spent over seven hours trying to dig him out.

The Montgomery County Fire and Rescue Service was one of multiple agencies who aided the Baltimore City Fire Department after the man became trapped at a site in the area of North Chester Street and Sinclair Lane Tuesday afternoon.



Fire officials say the man's body was found around 1:30 a.m. Wednesday and pulled from the debris around 3:45 a.m.

The fire department has not said specifically how the man became trapped.



==============================



Crews Continue Hours-long Recovery Of Construction Worker Trapped In Baltimore Trench
By Kimberly Eiten


June 5, 2018


BALTIMORE, MD (WJZ)– First responders recover a construction worker who is trapped in a trench in Clifton Park.

Officials are at the park located near Sinclair Lane and Chester Street in Northeast Baltimore, where they were attempting for hours to recover a 20-year-old man Tuesday afternoon into the night.

“It appears that the hole the worker was inside, it was not properly shored up,” said Baltimore Fire Spokesperson Blair Skinner.

Neighbors watched as the construction crew began working Tuesday morning.

“We was out here when these guys first start working. Then I was coming back across town from another project, and I saw all the confusion going on,” said Goether Roberts, who works nearby.

“I’ve never seen anything happen like this. Never. In all of my days,” neighbor Wanda Marshall said.



The Montgomery County Fire Department tweeted that structural engineers are assisting in the recovery.


Arborist Lewis P. Umbenhower III, 38, with On A Limb Tree Service, died after he fell approximately 30 feet from a tree he was cutting at Broken Tree Road in Medway, Mass.














Umbenhower family photo - Lewis P. Umbenhower III - dead from tree fall


Worker dies after falling 30 feet from tree

Updated: 8:49 AM EDT Jun 12, 2018

MEDWAY, Mass. —

An Athol resident died in Medway on Monday after apparently falling from a tree, the Milford Daily News reported.

Lewis P. Umbenhower III, 38, died as a result of his injuries at Milford Regional Medical Center, according to a statement released by the town.

The Medway Police and Fire Communications Center received a 911 emergency call stating a man at 27 Broken Tree Road fell approximately 30 feet out of a tree, according to the statement.

The preliminary investigation indicates that Umbenhower was cutting a portion of a tree when he fell.

Emergency medical aid was administered by first responders from Medway and he was transported to the medical center by Medway Fire & Hopedale Fire Paramedics.

The incident is under investigation by members of the Medway Police Department assisted by the CPAC unit out of the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office and investigators from Occupational Safety & Health Administration.

Umbenhower's mother told WCVB he was an independent contractor who'd been working for various companies as an arborist for 20 years. He leaves behind his family, including two sisters, and his dog.



======================


Athol man dies after falling from tree in Medway


June 11, 2018


An Athol resident died in Medway on Monday after apparently falling from a tree.

Lewis P. Umbenhower III, 38, died as a result of his injuries at Milford Regional Medical Center, according to a statement released by the town.

The Medway Police and Fire Communications Center received a 911 emergency call stating a man at 27 Broken Tree Road fell approximately 30 feet out of a tree, according to the statement.

The preliminary investigation indicates that Umbenhower was cutting a portion of a tree when he fell.

Emergency medical aid was administered by first responders from Medway and he was transported to the medical center by Medway Fire & Hopedale Fire Paramedics.

The incident is under investigation by members of the Medway Police Department assisted by the CPAC unit out of the Norfolk County District Attorney’s Office and investigators from Occupational Safety & Health Administration.



=======================








MEDWAY, Mass. -


A man hired to do tree work in Medway died after a fall on Monday.

The man, identified as 38-year-old Athol native Lewis Umbenhower, worked for a business called On A Limb Tree Service in Medway.

"There was an emergency call made, and Medway Fire and Police went to a resident's home in Medway," a town spokesperson said. "There was a man on the ground.

Umbenhower fell from a tree Monday afternoon at a home located at 27 Broken Tree Road, and later succumbed to his injuries.

"He was just cutting down a branch, and fell about 30 feet," Town of Medway Director of Communications Sandy Johnston said.

The homeowners spoke to Boston 25 News, saying they were shocked by the news and that they had seen the crew of three men before they left for work.

They say the businesses came highly recommended by neighbors.

Cameras show the tree that was being taken down, with a harness on the ground close by.

Paramedics performed CPR on Umbenhower before he was rushed to Milford Regional Center, where he then died.

BRAND NEW TRANSCANADA GAS PIPELINE EXPLODES: major natural gas rupture and explosion on TransCanada’s Leach XPress pipeline on Nixon Ridge











Last week, residents of Marshall County, West Virginia, awoke at 4:15 a.m. to a major natural gas rupture and explosion on TransCanada’s Leach XPress pipeline on Nixon Ridge — a quickly built pipeline only half a year old.

The fire was visible for miles, local TV news reported. Police warned anyone who could see the flames to evacuate — and the Emergency Management Agency director of neighboring Ohio County said officials had received dozens of 911 calls from locals able to see the fire, which was extinguished roughly four hours later. The blast was so powerful that one resident told a local CBS affiliate it felt like a tornado was passing through.

No one was injured, and no property damage was reported, TransCananda said in a statement released last week, adding that the cause of the explosion was not yet determined.

The Leach XPress pipeline is just six months old, having been put into service on January 1, 2018.

At the time, TransCanada emphasized that it was built quickly — but safely. “Leach XPress was done in less than a year,” Scott Castleman, manager of US Gas Communications for TransCanada, said in a January statement.

“We’re looking forward to generations of safe operations,” he added. “This is truly a best-in-class pipeline and we look forward to many years of safe, reliable, and efficient operation on behalf of our customers.”

Leach XPress is the first in a series of major TransCanada pipeline construction projects — and part of a larger sprint to build out oil and gas pipelines nationwide, spurred by an urgent push to get shale gas and oil to market.

“This is our first major pipeline in our growth portfolio,” Castleman said in January. “There’s currently about 8 and a half billion dollars in pipeline projects in the works for the US and TransCanada.”

Leach XPress, a 36-inch-diameter pipeline, went into immediate heavy service after it was built. Market research firm Genscape Inc. “said in a note to clients on Thursday that the Leach XPress segment has been flowing at or just above its operational capacity through May,” Natural Gas Intelligence reported.

The 160-mile, $1.6 billion dollar pipeline project is designed to carry 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas a day, moving it from the Marcellus and Utica shales down to the Southeast and Gulf Coast regions. Leach XPress runs from Marshall County, about 70 miles from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, into Ohio, and its gas then flows into the 12,000-mile Columbia Gas Transmission pipeline system.
Sprint to Build Pipelines

TransCanada also received US Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) approval for two other pipelines, the company announced on January 1, the same day that Leach XPress went into service.

The company plans to spend $3.2 billion to build the 171-mile Mountaineer XPress and the smaller Gulf XPress pipeline in Appalachia and intends to have those pipelines up and running by the end of this year.

In March, FERC rejected a request to suspend construction of these projects from three environmental groups, the Allegheny Defense Project, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, and the Sierra Club, finding that their “generalized claims of environmental harm, however, do not constitute sufficient evidence of irreparable harm that would justify a stay.”

This year, pipeline companies plan to lay 14,657 miles of pipeline worldwide — roughly double the amount finished in 2017, an Oil & Gas Journal report found. Over 81 percent of those pipes will carry natural gas, the same fossil fuel in last week’s pipeline blast.

And they’re planning to do it at starkly reduced costs of $5.94 million per mile, down from $7.65 million.

Meanwhile, whistleblowers at numerous pipeline companies have raised red flags about the impacts of rushed construction — including TransCanada.

DeSmog has previously reported numerous concerns raised by former TransCanada engineer Evan Vokes about construction problems and cut corners at TransCanada’s Keystone 1 and other pipelines.

“TransCanada keeps insisting the Keystone XL pipeline will be the safest pipeline ever built despite irrefutable evidence to the contrary,” Vokes, who was fired after ringing alarm bells internally, testified at a State Department hearing in Nebraska in April 2013. “In fact they are building the southern portion of the Keystone XL to the lowest permissible standards, just as they have the Keystone 1 and the Bison Pipeline.”
Former TransCanada engineer-turned-whistleblower Evan Vokes at a TransCanada construction site in Texas.©2013 Julie Dermansky

The cause of the blast last week is not yet clear.

In November, the Keystone pipeline spilled roughly 210,000 gallons of bitumin from tar sands in northeast South Dakota, a spill that came on the heels of other spills on that same line in 2016 and 2011.

Separately, in October, an accident at a TransCanada meter station in Ohio killed a maintenance worker following a leak of pressurized gas that did not ignite.

The Calgary-based company’s operations in the US are massive, especially following its acquisition of the Columbia Gas pipeline network two years ago. It operates over 56,000 miles of pipes, which can be found in virtually all of the major North American gas-producing areas.

“Once we’re done, we’ll be the only company in North America that can move a molecule of gas right from Northern Alberta through the Midwest and to the Gulf Coast and into Mexico City,” President and CEO Russell K. Girling said in a July 2017 video commemorating the acquisition. “We are now moving one in every four molecules [of gas] that crosses this continent, and we are an extremely important part of the economic fabric of Canada, Mexico, and the United States.”

“We truly are the North American natural gas transmission company,” Girling added.



========================


TransCanada contains West Virginia natgas pipeline blast, no injuries

Reuters Staff

(Reuters) - TransCanada Corp said it has isolated the section of Columbia Gas Transmission pipe that exploded early Thursday in Moundsville, West Virginia.

There were no employees at the site at the time of the blast around 4:15 a.m. EDT (0815 GMT) and no homes were in danger, officials from the Roberts Ridge Volunteer Fire Department told local news media.

The company said in a statement that its first priority was to protect the public and the environment.

Moundsville is located in Marshall County on the West Virginia panhandle on the Ohio-West Virginia border in the heart of the giant Marcellus and Utica natural gas shale formations.

TransCanada said the incident could impact about 1.3 billion cubic feet per day (bcfd) of gas service, according to a notice to customers using the pipeline.

One billion cubic feet is enough gas for about five million U.S. homes.

The company did not say when it expected the pipe to return to service, but said it was declaring a force majeure.

It was too soon for pipeline flow data to show any impact on the movement of gas through the area. The latest data from Thomson Reuters analysts showed West Virginia was producing about 4.8 bcfd of gas, about the same as earlier in the week.

The U.S. Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA) said it was investigating the cause of the incident.

Fire was reported this morning on Columbia Gas Transmission’s Leach Xpress Pipeline in Marshall County and the line has been shut down, said Darius Kirkwood, a spokesman for the agency.

The Leach XPress project, which was placed in-service on January 1, 2018, includes 160 miles (257 kilometers) of 36-inch-diameter pipeline and is capable of transporting approximately 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas a day, TransCanada said earlier this year.

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) too said it was investigating the explosion.

The 12,000-mile (19,312-kilometer) Columbia pipeline system, which TransCanada acquired in 2016, serves millions of customers from New York to the Gulf of Mexico.



===================================


TransCanada puts Leach XPress pipeline into service

TransCanada
The Leach Xpress pipeline during its construction back in the summer. The 160 mile line is now finished and in service


By Chris Lawrence in News


January 04, 2018

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va. — A new pipeline put into service this week will carry natural gas from the Marcellus Shale plays of the northern region of West Virginia to gas markets in the southeast United States. TransCanada put its new Leach XPress pipeline into service for the first time on January 1.

“This gas will serve markets in our region as well as other markets further down the road in the southeast United States,” said Scott Castleman Manager of U.S. Gas Communications for TransCanada.

The 160 mile pipeline starts in Marshall County, West Virginia, travels across the river into Ohio, and turns south. The terminal point is near the West Virginia-Kentucky border in southeastern Ohio. The line is one of many TransCanada has in the various stages of development aimed at increasing the capacity to transport Marcellus Shale products more rapidly to market.

“This is our first major pipeline in our growth portfolio,” Castleman explained. “There’s currently about 8 and a half billion dollars in pipeline projects in the works for the U.S. and TransCanada.”

TransCanada operates the lines formerly operated by Columbia Gas in West Virginia. The Leach XPress line can transport up to 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas a day.

“Successful completion of Leach XPress is a prime example of TransCanada’s North American strategy of connecting prolific and growing supply basins with markets eager to access reliable, reasonably priced sources of energy,” said Russ Girling, TransCanada President and CEO. “This is truly a best-in-class pipeline and we look forward to many years of safe, reliable, and efficient operation on behalf of our customers.”

Construction of the pipeline took approximately a year and involved 5,000 employees and contractors on the massive job. Most of the project was in the state of Ohio. It was closely monitored for safety and environmental impact according to Castleman.

“Leach XPress was done in less than a year. It was done safely and with a very keen eye on environmental responsibility,” he explained. “We’re looking forward to generations of safe operations.”

The gas transmitted along the line comes out of production operations in much of West Virginia’s northern panhandle as well as surrounding areas in Ohio and Pennsylvania.



===========================



TransCanada Pipeline Explodes in West Virginia

A newly installed TransCanada natural gas pipeline exploded early Thursday in the remote Nixon Ridge area of Marshall County in West Virginia.

No injuries were reported but flames and smoke from the blast could be seen as far as 20 miles away, residents told local media. Area police told CBS News the fire was "very large—if you can see it from your house, evacuate."


"It sounded like a freight train coming through, or a tornado, and the sky lit up bright orange, and then I got up and looked out the window and flames were shooting I don't know how far into the sky," Tina Heath-Chaplin, of Moundsville, told WPXI.

TransCanada—the same company behind the Keystone pipeline—said the explosion has been contained and an investigation is underway.

"As soon as the issue was identified, emergency response procedures were enacted and the segment of impacted pipeline was isolated. The fire was fully extinguished by approximately 8:30 a.m," the company commented Thursday.

"The cause of this issue is not yet known," TransCanada continued. "The site of the incident has been secured and we are beginning the process of working with applicable regulators to investigate, including the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration."



Robert Burrough, the director with the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration's Eastern Regional Office, told the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette the affected line is likely TransCanada's $1.6 billion, 160-mile Leach XPress pipeline, which started service in January.

Russ Girling, TransCanada president and CEO said at the line opening, "This is truly a best-in-class pipeline and we look forward to many years of safe, reliable, and efficient operation on behalf of our customers."



==========================


Leach XPress Project Placed into Service; Mountaineer XPress, Gulf XPress Receive FERC Certificates

HOUSTON, TEXAS--(Marketwired - Jan. 2, 2018) - News Release - TransCanada Corporation (TSX:TRP) (NYSE:TRP) (TransCanada) today announced its Leach XPress (LXP) project was placed in-service on January 1, 2018, and that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) has issued a certificate of public convenience and necessity for its Mountaineer XPress (MXP) and Gulf XPress (GXP) projects on December 29, 2017. All three projects provide vital links between Appalachian natural gas supply and growing U.S. markets.

LXP comprises 160 miles (257 kilometres) of 36-inch-diameter pipeline, three compressor stations, and modifications to an existing compressor station. Representing an investment of approximately US$1.6 billion, the pipeline is capable of transporting approximately 1.5 billion cubic feet of natural gas a day (Bcf/d). Via an existing interconnect with TransCanada's Columbia Gulf Transmission System and its Rayne XPress (RXP) project which was placed into service last November, LXP will facilitate the delivery of up to an additional 1 Bcf/d to Southeast and Gulf Coast supply markets.

"Successful completion of Leach XPress is a prime example of TransCanada's North American strategy of connecting prolific and growing supply basins with markets eager to access reliable, reasonably priced sources of energy," said Russ Girling, TransCanada President and CEO. "This is truly a best-in-class pipeline and we look forward to many years of safe, reliable, and efficient operation on behalf of our customers."

At peak construction, LXP employed nearly 5,000 employees and contractors.

FERC's thorough review and approval of MXP and GXP follows three years of planning by TransCanada's project teams, along with over two years of outreach to communities and landowners along the projects' routes. Once remaining regulatory approvals are obtained, TransCanada plans to begin right-of-way preparation and construction activities on both projects, with an anticipated in-service date in late 2018.

"FERC's approval of Mountaineer XPress and Gulf XPress allows us to continue delivering on our commitment to create new outlets for our customers, transporting Marcellus and Utica shale gas to key markets in the U.S. and beyond," said Stanley Chapman III, TransCanada's Executive Vice President and President, U.S. Natural Gas Pipelines. "Our project teams are prepared to begin construction on both projects."

The MXP and GXP projects consist of combined infrastructure investment of US$3.2 billion. MXP will deliver approximately 2.6 Bcf/d of gas to the TCO Pool and Leach markets on the Columbia Gas Transmission System through the construction of 170-miles (274 kilometres) of 36-inch pipeline, three new compressor stations and upgrades to three existing compressor stations. GXP will transport approximately 0.8 Bcf/d to Southeast and Gulf Coast supply markets through the construction of seven new compressor stations, and upgrades to one existing compressor station, along TransCanada's existing Columbia Gulf System.

MXP and GXP are expected to create over 8,000 jobs during peak construction later this year. Both are underpinned by long-term, fixed-fee, firm transportation service agreements. They will be designed, constructed and operated with a core focus on safety and minimizing environmental impact.

TransCanada now has FERC Certificate Orders for all major Appalachian growth projects associated with the 2016 acquisition of Columbia Pipeline Group. Together, they represent a significant part of TransCanada's portfolio of complementary infrastructure assets and CAD$24 billion of near-term growth projects that is expected to underpin growth in the company's common dividend at the upper end of an eight to 10 percent range annually through 2020 and an additional eight to 10 percent in 2021.

With more than 65 years' experience, TransCanada is a leader in the responsible development and reliable operation of North American energy infrastructure including natural gas and liquids pipelines, power generation and gas storage facilities. TransCanada operates one of the largest natural gas transmission networks that extends more than 56,900 miles, tapping into virtually all major gas supply basins in North America. TransCanada is the continent's leading provider of gas storage and related services with 653 billion cubic feet of storage capacity. A large independent power producer, TransCanada currently owns or has interests in approximately 6,100 megawatts of power generation in Canada and the United States. TransCanada is also the developer and operator of one of North America's leading liquids pipeline systems that extends approximately 3,000 miles, connecting growing continental oil supplies to key markets and refineries. TransCanada's common shares trade on the Toronto and New York stock exchanges under the symbol TRP. Visit TransCanada.com to learn more, or connect with us on social media and 3BL Media.

FORWARD LOOKING INFORMATION

This publication contains certain information that is forward-looking and is subject to important risks and uncertainties (such statements are usually accompanied by words such as "anticipate", "expect", "believe", "may", "will", "should", "estimate", "intend" or other similar words). Forward-looking statements in this document are intended to provide TransCanada security holders and potential investors with information regarding TransCanada and its subsidiaries, including management's assessment of TransCanada's and its subsidiaries' future plans and financial outlook. All forward-looking statements reflect TransCanada's beliefs and assumptions based on information available at the time the statements were made and as such are not guarantees of future performance. Readers are cautioned not to place undue reliance on this forward-looking information, which is given as of the date it is expressed in this news release, and not to use future-oriented information or financial outlooks for anything other than their intended purpose. TransCanada undertakes no obligation to update or revise any forward-looking information except as required by law. For additional information on the assumptions made, and the risks and uncertainties which could cause actual results to differ from the anticipated results, refer to the Quarterly Report to Shareholders dated November 8, 2017 and 2016 Annual Report filed under TransCanada's profile on SEDAR at www.sedar.com and with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission at www.sec.gov.







Tuesday, June 12, 2018

OSHA has cited Appleton roofing contractor Hector Hernandez again after OSHA inspectors observed employees exposed to falls and other safety hazards at two Wisconsin job sites. OSHA proposed penalties of $120,320.



June 12, 2018

U.S. Department of Labor Finds Wisconsin Contractor Continues
To Expose Roofers to Falls and Other Safety Hazards

APPLETON, WI ‒ The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has cited Appleton roofing contractor Hector Hernandez again after OSHA inspectors observed employees exposed to falls and other safety hazards at two Wisconsin job sites. OSHA proposed penalties of $120,320.

Hernandez, who operates Town City Construction, was cited for one repeated and two willful violations for failing to provide fall protection, train workers on fall hazards, properly install an extension ladder for safe egress, and provide required ladder jack scaffold components.

“Employers are required to provide fall protection to employees working in construction at heights above 6 feet,” said Robert Bonack, OSHA Appleton Area Office Director. “This employer’s repeated failure to comply with federal safety requirements exposes employees to fatal injuries from fall hazards.”

Hernandez has 15 business days from receipt of his citations and penalties to comply, request an informal conference with OSHA’s area director, or contest the findings before the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission.

Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees. OSHA’s role is to ensure these conditions for America’s working men and women by setting and enforcing standards, and providing training, education, and assistance. For more information, visit https://www.osha.gov.


===============================


Wisconsin roofer accused of ignoring six different OSHA citations



Federal OSHA inspectors in Wisconsin recently conducted an inspection of a residential roofing site on the 1100 block of East Tyler Avenue, in Eau Claire, WI. The contractor performing the work, Town City Construction, which is based in Appleton, WI and owned by Hector Hernandez, is a serial OSHA offender. They’ve been cited by OSHA for fall protection hazards five prior times.

This inspection was not much different than previous inspections, except for the fact that after the employees donned the required harnesses to satisfy the inspector, the inspector returned an hour later to find employees in violation yet again.

OSHA inspectors saw five Town City employees on a home in the 1100 block of East Tyler Avenue facing down the roof’s slope while tearing off the existing asphalt shingles with tools at the roof’s eave. They also found a sixth employee standing along the rake edge at the peak of the roof, while preparing to install underlayment materials and ice and water guards, across the peak of the roof. Workers were at risk of falls up to 14 feet.The agency cited the company with one willful violation and an additional $70,000 in proposed federal fines on June 13.

But it’s likely that the company will deal with this OSHA citation the same way it’s dealt with the previous five…by ignoring it. The company has ignored five previous OSHA citations and fines issued from 2010 through 2015, including a willful violation cited last year.

“Town City continues to callously put its employees at risk for serious injuries or death because the company refuses to use fall protection,” said Mark Hysell, OSHA’s area director in Eau Claire. “Preventable falls account for nearly 40 percent of all deaths in the construction industry. I fear that only serious injury or death of an employee will convince this contractor to use required safety equipment. OSHA is committed to protecting workers from that fate.”

The agency has cited Town City for fall violations six times at Wisconsin work sites. Inspectors issued a willful violation in 2015 in Wisconsin Rapids, a second repeated violation in 2013 in Appleton, a repeated violation in 2012 in Sherwood and serious violations in Appleton in 2012 and Greenwood in 2010.

A fire that killed David Creech and his two-year-old son, Matthew and injured three others was started by a toddler playing with a lighter.






JOHNSTON COUNTY, N.C. (WITN) - 
Investigators say a fire that killed two people and injured three others was started by a toddler playing with a lighter.

It happened on Beulahtown Road in Kenley Saturday Morning.

Johnston County deputies say they found David Creech and his two-year-old son, Matthew, dead inside. The girlfriend of David Creech and both his 3-year-old and 10-year-old sons were transported to UNC Chapel Hill.

They're listed in serious but stable condition.

Investigators say the fire started in a toddlers bed because a juvenile was playing with a lighter. They say no criminal activity is believed to have occurred but an investigation is ongoing.