Democracy Gone Astray

Democracy, being a human construct, needs to be thought of as directionality rather than an object. As such, to understand it requires not so much a description of existing structures and/or other related phenomena but a declaration of intentionality.
This blog aims at creating labeled lists of published infringements of such intentionality, of points in time where democracy strays from its intended directionality. In addition to outright infringements, this blog also collects important contemporary information and/or discussions that impact our socio-political landscape.

All the posts here were published in the electronic media – main-stream as well as fringe, and maintain links to the original texts.

[NOTE: Due to changes I haven't caught on time in the blogging software, all of the 'Original Article' links were nullified between September 11, 2012 and December 11, 2012. My apologies.]

Tuesday, July 03, 2012

Wood dust warning came before deadly sawmill blasts

Sawmills in B.C.'s Interior were warned wood dust was an explosive risk before two deadly sawmill explosions earlier this year, in which wood dust is suspected as a factor.

But the advice took a back seat to concern that dust was harmful to workers' lungs.

In thousands of pages of 2007 to 2011 WorkSafeBC inspection reports, obtained by The Vancouver Sun under a freedom of information request, wood dust was highlighted as a concern nearly 100 times, primarily as a health risk and possible carcinogen.

Forest companies, the United Steelworkers union and individual workers at the two mills that exploded have said the risk of wood dust explosions wasn't widely known, but WorkSafeBC inspection reports show that multiple warnings were issued to a number of mills before the two deadly explosions.

United Steelworkers union safety specialist Ron Corbeil said it now appears there was enough information known - which also included warnings coming out of the United States - that more attention should have been paid to wood dust's explosive potential.

"It's really unfortunate it's taken two mill explosions to really get British Columbia's attention," said Corbeil.

The union official is referring to dust explosions in the U.S. that killed 119 people and injured 718 between 1980 and 2005, outlined in a U.S. federal Chemical Safety Board report. In 2008, another 14 workers were killed in a dust explosion at a sugar refinery in Georgia.

WorkSafeBC was aware of the U.S. deaths, saying it sponsored a combustible dust workshop in 2010 because "it is also a concern in B.C. workplaces."

The inspection reports show wood dust was enough of a respiratory health concern in sawmills that it was part of WorkSafeBC's provincial high risk strategy in 2009.

WorkSafeBC tested airborne levels of wood dust, but also required mills do so, according to the inspection reports.

And while the ensuing reports noted wood dust was an explosive hazard, WorkSafeBC did not set safety limits for accumulation at that time.

The inspection reports show that 10 times, saw-mills in Elkford, Grand Forks, Merritt, Quesnel and Fort St. John were warned of wood dust's explosive capacity.

WorkSafeBC regional manager Bruce Clarke said there wasn't a bigger push on companies to take action to reduce explosion risks, simply because a sawmill had never blown up in British Columbia.

"I have been in the industry and around the industry for 44 years, and I've never seen a mill blow up," said Clarke, the prevention man-ager for northern B.C.

Standards addressing the explosive dangers of wood dust were not set until after the second deadly explosion in April of this year.

The new rules specified that more than one-eighth of an inch of dust (about the width of a dime) covering five per cent of the saw-mill area constitute a combustible hazard.

Clarke admitted that before the dust guidelines were added, WorkSafeBC's regulations were "weak" around enforcement of fire and explosion hazards.

And Clarke stressed the B.C. Fire Commissioner's office remains the main authority on issues such as the risk of dust explosions in mills.

The WorkSafeBC records show the Elko sawmill at Elkford, about 100 kilometres northeast of Cranbrook in B.C.'s southern Interior, was warned in four separate inspection reports between January and November 2011 about the danger of wood dust explosions.

On Jan. 27, 2011, a Work-SafeBC official noted that "wood dust [was] dispersed and accumulated about many levels" of the sawmill on equipment, handrails and rafters.

Health effects had been reported by workers, and WorkSafeBC told the saw-mill that it needed adequate ventilation to keep exposure below harmful levels.

But WorkSafeBC also told the sawmill that "wood dust is a combustible dust and must be controlled to minimize the risk of fires and explosion."

Despite the repeated WorkSafeBC warnings and the fact that some mill workers who trained as firefighters for the mill had seen videos of dust explosions, generally workers at Elko still "couldn't grasp the notion of dust exploding," said Jeff Bromley, a union representative at the mill.

That changed after Babine Forest Products in Burns Lake and Lakeland Mills in Prince George exploded within three months of each other in 2012, killing four workers and injuring dozens, said Bromley.

"Guys were really concerned about coming to work," he said.

A plan was made to reduce dust in the mill, but that got caught in financial pressures and the recent sale of the mill to Canfor, noted Bromley.

He pointed out that unlike some sawmills, Elko does not use a mist system to keep dust down.

Although Elko is at the edge of the pine beetle-killed timber area and uses other species such as spruce and fir, it still deals with dry wood, which increases the dust problem, explained Bromley.

Canfor said it could not provide anyone to answer questions on what steps it was taking at the Elko mill to control dust, or generally how it was addressing the issue in the company's saw-mills in the B.C. Interior.

Canfor's sawmill in Fort St. John was also given a warning in June 2010 that wood dust could explode.

Once again, the focus was on the health of workers exposed to wood dust, but the WorkSafeBC officer also cited "the threat of the fire hazard and the explosive atmosphere created on a continual basis."

Other WorkSafeBC warnings were issued to:

- A Tolko sawmill in Quesnel (July 2010) that was told after airborne dust was observed in the basement that "wood dust is combustible when exposed to heat or flame and may form explosive mixtures with air in the presence of an ignition source." A similar warning was issued to Tolko's mill in Merritt (June and November 2011).

- Interfor in Grand Forks (August 2010) where large amounts of combustible dusts collected on building structures and equipment, which at "these concentrations ... present a high risk of a fire or explosion."

The earliest warning in the past five years of wood dust's potential to explode was issued in September 2007 to M&K Sawmill in Quesnel.

Safety regulators and industry representatives have not directly linked the two deadly sawmill explosions to wood dust, but increasing attention has been directed to the fine powder produced from dry, pine beetle-killed timber milled at these facilities in the B.C. Interior.

WorkSafeBC ordered sawmills to clean out wood dust following the second explosion and is investigating wood dust as a factor in both cases.

The WorkSafeBC inspection reports from the past five years highlight that dry, beetle-killed pine was creating a greater-than-normal dust problem for sawmills.

Original Article
Source: vancouver sun
Author: Gordon Hoekstra

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