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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Feb. 12, 2016)
Street Roots • Feb. 12-18, 2016 News TIMBER, from page 4 pesticides. Research conducted by the Northwest Forest Worker Center out of its Medford office indicates many workers don’t have adequate training or safety gear, and that they are often subject to abuses such as working under pressure to move dangerously fast for long hours without rest breaks, fear of retaliation for reporting injuries and wage theft. Much of their work is taxpayer-funded, occurring under government contracts on public lands, such as in Ponce-Leon’s case. During a Feb. 5 Environmental Justice Task Force meeting in Salem, top state industry regulators, OSHA Administrator Michael Wood and Bureau of Labor and Industry Administrator Brad Avakain, joined an ongoing discussion on issues facing forestry and farmworkers that was brought to policymakers by advocates and workers. They were there to provide the task force with insight into what their agencies do. They both explained while it’s not their job to determine whether someone is in the country legally, it is their responsibility to ensure that all people employed in the state are treated lawfully. But fear of retaliation makes proving some cases in forests and on farms a challenge, they agreed. Their agencies often rely on employee cooperation when they are building a case and on complaints from workers to point them in the direction of employers who are breaking the law. While OSHA inspects for safety and health violations, BOLI enforces wage and hour violations, such as wage theft and denied rest breaks. While about 73 percent of reforestation worksite inspections by OSHA are unrelated to a complaint or injury, BOLI’s enforcement is almost entirely complaint driven. Avakian told the task force that about 15 years ago, BOLI had 14 staff dedicated to farm labor. They were out in the fields and labor housing, building relationships with immigrant farmworkers. “We really had boots on the ground in respect to seeing what the conditions were like for workers,” he said. “Through budget cuts that occurred a decade ago - we really have one person (dedicated to farms) for the entire state of Oregon right now.” He said he needs workers to report abuses to BOLI so he can file a Commissioner’s Complaint, which would launch a civil rights investigation, but it’s employer specific. BOLI received 64 wage claims from the reforestation sector between 2010 and 2015 - and 111 allegations of wage violations other than unpaid wages, such as failure to provide meal and rest periods. During that same period, however, there were only three retaliation cases filed with BOLL 'T'he state OSHA inspector who X investigated Ponce-Leon’s death determined it could have resulted from a chainsaw kickback caused by any one of a number of incomplete cuts on limbs, brush and trees in his work area. He noted other employees on the jobsite weren’t cutting trees safely either, and the supervisor hadn’t seemed to notice or take any corrective action. Ultimately, OSHA cited Ponce-Leon’s Page 5 A reforestation worker carries a piece of wood away from a controlled bum on private forest land that’s part of the Collaboration Conservation Partnership Initiative across Southern Oregon and Northern . California. PHOTO COURTESY OF LOMAKATSI RESTORATION PROJECT with 3 percent of all jobsites inspected each year. Jeff Nelson owns Cutting Edge Forestry, which was subcontracted with his brother Scott Nelson’s company, Summitt Forests Inc., on the project Ponce-Leon was working on when he died. Workers for both companies -were onsite that day. PHOTO COURTESY OF LOMAKATSI RESTORATION PROJECT A Lomakatsi employee thins trees with a chainsaw in the Ashland Watershed. employer, Cutting Edge Forestry Inc., for five violations at the conclusion of its investigation. Two were for not training him, which likely contributed to his death. This month in Salem, legislators are determining whether or not to increase the state’s damages cap of $500,000 in wrongful death lawsuits. Cutting Edge Forestry got off easy. There was no lawsuit, and it was charged $510 in fines. “Our penalties are the lowest penalties for a first-time violation in the country,” said OSHA Administrator Michael Wood. “That’s sort of a trade off against our high enforcement presence.” He said jobsites are more likely to be inspected in Oregon than in any other state, employees under the table, so it isn’t always clear how many employees they have. Wood said while many of the fines may start low, they increase steeply when there is a repeat violation. Street Roots reviewed all OSHA inspections of reforestation worksites and sawmills, another forestry sector that In his field notes, the OSHA inspector employs many immigrant workers, that were indicated none of the workers on site were conducted over the past five years. familiar with Division 7 rules - the state Among all the inspections, there were laws governing safe forestry activities. only three examples of repeat violations Summitt Forests was also fined for v cited: two at Eugene-based Goshen Inc.’s violations related to Ponce-Leon’s training, Junction City sawmill and one at Goshen but also for violations cited for its Forest Products LLC in Eugene. employees’ failure to fall trees safely at the In 2010, OSHA fined Goshen Inc.’s, same site, for a total of $1,035 in penalties. sawmill $275 when an inspector observed According to InsideGov, Summitt Forests employees failing to properly shut down has won government contracts worth equipment before performing repairs. In $82.7 million since 2000, and Cutting Edge’s 2013" it was fined less, $240, for what was government contracts during the same categorized as a repeat of this violation. The period were worth $24.6 million. other repeat violation, for failing to have Advocates working on behalf of reforestation workers, as well as current and safe guards to protect workers from hazardous machinery, went up from $100 in former forestry workers, told Street Roots 2010 to $240 in 2013. they think government penalties issued to At Goshen Forest Products, a fine for contractors who break the law are too low failing to protect and equate to a slap workers from on the wrist. "Our penalties are the lowest sprocket wheels Wood said the penalties for a first time violation and chains went up size of the employer in the country." from $125 in 2009 is one of the biggest MICHAEL WOOD to $600 in 2011. factors in OSHA ADMINISTRATOR Over the past determining the five years, 5 size of OSHA’s fine. “Our penalties are designed to motivate percent of the state’s 284 reforestation employers, and it takes a lower penalty to employers listed with Oregon Employment motivate a mom and pop operation than it Department were inspected each year. does a larger corporation. We would look at Some of the inspections were not of the severity of the potential outcomes and active worksites, but of the company’s office we’d look at the probability of injury. We and equipment storage. also would take into account the employer’s The median fine for a category-serious good faith effort to comply,” he said. violation, which is violation that could result OSHA Statewide Safety Enforcement in a serious injury, was $100 among Manger Gary Beck explained fines are reforestation contractors. For sawmills, the predetermined by administrative rules, and median of 325 citations for “serious” if the employer has less than 25 employees, violations was $150. In some cases fines penalties can be reduced by 60 percent See TIMBER, page 7 But some contractors pay their