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Cal/OSHA Fines Gorilla Tree Service After Worker Death

Feb. 6, 2018
The state-run occupational health and safety agency issued the Napa, Calif. company $23,200 in citations.

On Aug. 15, 2017, 24-year old tree trimmer Jeremy Booth was strangled to death when a rope he used to lower limbs from an aerial bucket was caught and pulled into the chipper.

Cal/OSHA now has cited Booth's employer, Napa, Calif.-based Gorilla Tree Service, for serious and accident-related workplace safety violations after an investigation following the fatality.

“Tree work is a high-risk industry, and safety requirements are in place to protect workers from known hazards,” said Juliann Sum,Cal/OSHA chief . “Employers must ensure that workers are effectively trained to use brush chippers and other dangerous machinery safely.”

Among the seven citations issued to Gorilla Tree Service, the company was unable to certify it had properly trained the worker, who had been employed at the company for six months, according to the agency.

Seven violations, including one serious accident-related, one serious and five general violations, were given for the company's failure to:

  • provide documented training records for workers to certify that they had completed the required tree work and CPR training;
  • brief workers before starting the job, including a description of hazards, work procedures and appropriate protective equipment;
  • ensure the chipper was equipped, maintained and operated in accordance with the manufacturer’s recommendations. Cal/OSHA found the chipper’s moving parts of belt and pulley drives were not guarded as required; and
  • prevent entanglement hazards and unwanted material from entering the point of operation on the chipper.

Cal/OSHA also fined the company a total of $23,200 based on the citations.

In a statement to the media, the agency cited the following incidents brush chipper-related incidents in California that resulted in one fatality and four serious injuries:

  • A worker was killed in 2012 while feeding brush into a chipper in Nevada City when a rope binding the brush became entangled in the chipper drum and looped around the worker’s neck. The force on the rope was so great that the worker was decapitated.
  • In Los Angeles County in 2012, a worker was hospitalized from injuries caused by a chipper. Two workers were removing a tree using rope and a brush chipper. One of the workers was attached to a rope that abruptly went into the chipper pulling him toward the feeder. He was taken to the hospital with a punctured lung and fractures to his ribs, left arm, thumb and wrist.
  • In 2013, a Solano County worker lost his left ring finger when his wedding band suddenly became caught between the side frame of the feeding bay and the branch he was pushing into the brush chipper.
  • While operating a brush chipper in 2013, a worker in Concord was hospitalized. A truck rolled down a hill and jackknifed toward him while he was feeding brush into the chipper. Both of his legs became pinned between the truck’s side door and the frame of the chipper’s in-feed table. Both of his legs were fractured.

Tree workers are 56 times more likely to suffer a fatal occupational injury than workers in all industries combined, Cal/OSHA stated. The major causes of tree worker injuries and fatalities include falls, electrical shock, being struck by a tree branch, chainsaw lacerations, palm tree skirt collapses and ladder accidents.

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