New Orleans — OSHA can issue citations to general contractors who
fail to control hazardous conditions at multi-employer worksites, even
if those conditions do not directly affect their own employees, the U.S.
Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit ruled Nov. 26.
In its decision,
the court states that the landscape has changed since the 5th Circuit
ruled in 1981 that “OSHA regulations protect only an employer’s own
employees” in Melerine v. Avondale Shipyards, Inc. Brian
Duncan, administrative law judge for the Occupational Safety and Health
Review Commission’s Denver regional office, used that decision as
precedent in April 2017 when he decided
that Hensel Phelps Construction Co. could not be held liable for OSHA
violations from one of its subcontractors. The Department of Labor
appealed that decision.
The appeals court stated that because of the Chevron deference, which comes from the 1984 U.S. Supreme Court case Chevron USA, Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc., that the 1981 5th Circuit decision no longer is valid. The 5th Circuit covers Louisiana, Texas and Mississippi.
In the Chevron decision, the Supreme Court ruled that courts should
defer to an agency’s interpretations of its own statutes as long as that
interpretation is reasonable and Congress has not addressed the
particular issue clearly.
According to the 5th Circuit’s published decision, Phelps Construction’s subcontractor, Haynes Eaglin Watters,
hired another company, CVI Development, for “demolition, excavation and
other work” in 2014 at a library construction site in Austin, TX. A CVI
excavation project did not have a protective system (e.g., sloping),
and a “nearly vertical wall” of soil was stacked about 12 feet high.
When CVI attempted to have its employees work elsewhere on the
construction site during a rainy morning in March 2015, a City of Austin
inspector and a Phelps Construction area superintendent told CVI owner
Karl Daniels that his workers had to go back to the excavation site.