Seven people were hurt in the 2009 explosion at a ConAgra Foods Inc., factory in Garner, N.C., and last month’s $14.6 million verdict in a 2009 Slim Jim factory explosion raises a host of issues for risk managers.
By JONATHAN BERR,
Investigation found that the explosion was due to the improper purging of air lines.
Four people died in the 2009 incident, and the court in June will rule on punitive damages in connection with the Garner explosion. The Slim Jim accident highlights the poor job many food companies do in managing contractors.
Jacobs Engineering, the company blamed for the blast at the now-shuttered plant, also may get hit with punitive damages, said David Stradley, the attorney representing the workers. ConAgra declined to comment on the case and Jacobs Engineering didn’t respond to inquiries.
In a 2009 Associated Press dispatch, ConAgra was quoted as saying that since the accident it has “worked closely and fully cooperated” with authorities. ConAgra, however, declined to discuss the 26 citations and $134,773 in fines leveled by safety inspectors nearly three years ago.
Investigators from the U.S. Chemical Safety Board determined that the accident occurred after contractors at the plant purged or removed air-in lines before gas flows through them without taking adequate safety precautions.
Purging lines is supposed to prevent explosive mixtures of gas and air from forming, and safety advocates have argued for years that it was too dangerous to purge gas lines indoors after the practice was blamed for several prior explosions.
Federal investigators were harsh in their criticism regarding what took place at the Slim Jim plant during the purging — which was occurring while a new water heater was being installed. Workers relied on their sense of smell instead of gas detection equipment to know when the piping had been purged.
More than 200 people were in the building when the explosion occurred.
Copyright 2012© LRP Publications
