ZfllU'JGil AM S-C,
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
PERFORMANCE ABATEMENT
SERVICES, INC.,
DIVISION ONE
Appellant,
No. 70451-6-1
v.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR AND
INDUSTRIES,
Respondent. FILED: August 11, 2014
Dwyer, J. — Performance Abatement Services, Inc. (PAS) challenges the
Board of Industrial Insurance Appeals' (Board) determination that it failed to
provide adequate hand washing facilities, and that this failure constituted a
serious violation of the Washington Industrial Safety and Health Act of 19731
(WISHA). The Board's factual findings are supported by substantial evidence
and those findings adequately support the Board's determination. Accordingly,
we affirm.
PAS is a company that specializes in lead and asbestos removal. In
March 2011, PAS performed asbestos and lead abatement work at a three-story
building owned by Western Washington University. The building was formerly an
armory owned by the Washington National Guard. During the building's previous
1Ch. 49.17 RCW.
No. 70451-6-1/2
ownership, a portion of the basement was used as a shooting range.
Work in the shooting range consisted of bagging up and removing sand,
which was littered with bullets. Due to the high amount of lead from the bullets,
the shooting range was cordoned off. A three-stage showering area was set up
outside the cordoned shooting range. The shooting range was only accessible
through the showering area, and employees working on sand removal were
required to take a shower upon leaving the shooting range.
The rest of the building contained much lower amounts of lead than the
shooting range and was not similarly cordoned off. Work in the rest of the
building consisted mainly of removing metal from a boiler and removing lead by
scrubbing the walls with wire brushes and scraping them with a device referred to
as a "five-in-one."
On March 17, 2011, Christian Bannick, an industrial hygienist with the
Department of Labor and Industries (Department), conducted his first inspection
of the work ongoing at the armory. Bannick later returned "at least a couple
times following up with additional walkthroughs." Following the inspections,
Bannick cited PAS for violation of Washington Administrative Code (WAC) 296-
155-17619(5), requiring the provision of adequate hand washing facilities for
employees exposed to lead.2 Bannick proposed that the violation be classified
as serious due to the potential health effects of lead exposure, including "impact
on . . . the blood forming systems," "reproductive hazards," and "neurological
2 Bannick also cited PAS for violations of two other WAC provisions, neither of which are
at issue on appeal.
No. 70451-6-1/3
damage."
An Industrial Appeals judge conducted a hearing on the citation. At the
hearing, the judge heard testimony from Bannick and numerous PAS employees.
These individuals testified as follows.
Arnoldo Cantu, a laborer with PAS, stated that employees would wash
their hands in a tub connected to the showering area. The tub did not have
running water; rather, it was filled in the morning and emptied at the end of the
day. Cantu also stated that employees used the tub to clean their equipment.
Cantu testified that a separate washing station was located on the first
floor of the armory. This station had a foot pump for running water, and was also
equipped with soap and towels. Cantu could not recall if there was a washing
facility on the second floor, but believed there was one.
The showers, as far as Cantu could recall, always had running water.
Cantu used the showers whenever he exited the shooting range. However, he
also stated that "sometimes you can't get enough water out of" the showers.
Mynor Arita, a former laborer with PAS, stated that employees washed
their hands in a bucket of water or sometimes with a sprayer. Arita testified that
the shower had no water.
Lauro Santiago, a laborer with PAS, stated that employees would use
buckets filled with soap and water to wash their hands. These buckets were
filled using water hoses. Santiago stated that he and other employees would
also wash their hands using a "hotsy" sprayer. Water from the sprayer collected
in a tub, and was later emptied by hand into a 55 gallon container.
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No. 70451-6-1/4
Santiago testified that the shower functioned properly, and that he would
use it every time he left the shooting range. Santiago stated that additional
showers were set up in other parts of the building. According to Santiago, the
armory was equipped with showers throughout the entire project.
Earnest Crane, a PAS employee who served as the foreman on the
armory project, testified that he walked around the armory with Bannick during at
least one inspection. Crane stated that Bannick told him "good job" after seeing
a shower on site.
Crane further testified that there were two showering facilities in the
basement: one for the shooting range and one for the rest of the basement.
There was also a shower located on the second floor, located near the entrance
to the building. Crane stated that the shower for the shooting range was fully
operational on the day that laborers worked in the firing range. Crane observed
the workers exit the shooting range shower and saw that all of them were wet.
After work on the firing range was completed, the shower was relocated to the
first floor.
The only hand washing facility Crane described at the hearing was "a
three-stage shower with ... a black tub that we use on jobs with a water hose
ran inside of it," located on the second floor.
Gary Hansen, a branch safety supervisor for PAS, testified that he
became involved with the armory project after Bannick's first inspection. During
a subsequent inspection, Hansen observed the following interaction between
Bannick and Crane:
No. 70451-6-1/5
Mr. Bannick asked Mr. Crane if we had a hand wash station set up
to do the lead work. Mr. Crane pointed at the shower that was set
up in the hallway and said, "We have this shower set up." And to
the best of my recollection, Mr. Bannick said, "That's even better."[3]
Hansen also testified that he observed "a set of buckets at the bottom of the
stairwell" being used as a hand washing facility.
Bannick, the Department's inspector, stated that during one of his
inspections, the foreman informed him about the shower that had previously
been used, and also informed him that the employees were currently using
buckets filled with water to wash their hands. Bannick saw these buckets in the
basement and was unsure "what the source of water was." Bannick testified that
water in buckets is not clean because "[tjhat's standing water that's becoming
progressively more contaminated depending on the number of individuals that
are using it." Bannick did not see any other hand washing facilities during his
inspections, nor did he observe any employees washing their hands.
When Bannick conducted his first inspection, work on the shooting range
had been completed, and the shower for that area had been removed. Bannick
did observe "evidence of shower stalls for decon" on site. Bannick's
understanding was "that showers were present and set up for different aspects of
the job, but that a shower was not always up, available, operational to be used in
the fashion of a hand washing facility at all times for employees during breaks."
After considering all of the aforementioned testimony, the Industrial
Appeals judge issued a proposed decision on June 14, 2012. The judge found
3 Bannick did not remember the conversation, but could not say that he never said such a
thing.
No. 70451-6-1/6
that "PAS employees were not given access to hand washing facilities which met
the requirements of WAC 296-155-140." Finding of Fact 5. In the proposed
decision, the judge explained her reasoning as follows:
Ifthe point of having hand washing facilities is, as Mr. Bannick
testified, to prevent employee ingestion of lead during breaks and
after hours, the requirement that employees take the time to fully
undress and shower before taking minor breaks to use the
restroom, get water, or have a cigarette does not meet this need.
Further, the evidence conflicted as to whether or not
showers were even provided. This is not surprising, given the level
of movement taking place at the Armory during that time period. . . .
Showers were moved depending upon where they were needed in
the building.
Although the testimony is mixed as to whether the showers
even worked, the testimony did establish that employees would use
buckets, tubs, hoses, hotsy sprayers or a combination thereof to
wash their hands when showers weren't present or working
properly. Because I agree with Mr. Bannick that standing bucket
water becomes progressively more contaminated depending upon
the number of individuals using it (or, indeed, even as one
individual uses it), I cannot find that these "alternatives" met the
strict (and mandatory) requirements set forth in the WAC.
Accordingly, I find that PAS violated WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a) by
failing to provide hand washing facilities which complied with its
requirements.
The judge further found that the violation was serious. The judge thus
concluded that "PAS committed a serious violation of WAC 296-155-
17619(5)(a)." Conclusion of Law 3.
PAS filed a petition for review with the Board on July 26, 2012. The
Board denied PAS's petition and adopted the judge's proposed decision in
full.
PAS appealed to the Whatcom County Superior Court. The superior court
upheld the Board's determinations in all respects. PAS was ordered to pay a civil
No. 70451-6-1/7
penalty of $400 and a statutory attorney fee of $200.
PAS appeals.
II
PAS challenges the Board's Finding of Fact 5, that it failed to provide
adequate hand washing facilities, contending that this finding is not supported by
substantial evidence. PAS contends that the testimony of certain PAS
employees is inconsistent with the factual finding that it did not provide adequate
hand washing facilities. PAS also asserts that showers suffice as adequate hand
washing facilities. Neither contention has merit.
"We review a decision by the BIIA directly, based on the record before the
agency." J.E. Dunn Nw.. Inc. v. Dep't of Labor &Indus., 139 Wn. App. 35, 42,
156 P.3d 250 (2007) (citing Legacy Roofing. Inc. v. Dep't of Labor &Indus., 129
Wn. App. 356, 363, 119 P.3d 366 (2005)). "We review findings of fact to
determine whether they are supported by substantial evidence." J.E. Dunn, 139
Wn. App. at 42 (citing Inland Foundry Co. v. Dep't of Labor &Indus., 106Wn.
App. 333, 340, 24 P.3d 424 (2001)). Substantial evidence is that which is "in
sufficient quantum to persuade a fair-minded person of the truth of the declared
premise." Holland v. Boeing Co.. 90 Wn.2d 384, 390-91, 583 P.2d 621 (1978).
We review findings of fact in light of the record as a whole. J.E. Dunn, 139 Wn.
App. at 43. "Becausewe give deference to an agency's factual findings in its
area of expertise, we will uphold the Board's findings unless they are clearly
erroneous." Wash. Cedar & Supply Co. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 119 Wn. App.
906, 914, 83 P.3d 1012 (2004). This standard of review does not contemplate
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No. 70451-6-1/8
that we will "undertake an evaluation of the credibility of witnesses" or "engage in
a weighing and balancing of conflicting evidence." Gogertv v. Dep't of
Institutions, 71 Wn.2d 1, 8, 426 P.2d 476 (1967).
The Department bears the burden of proving that a violation occurred.
Mowat Constr. Co. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus., 148 Wn. App. 920, 924, 201 P.3d
407 (2009). In order to prove that a violation occurred, the Department must
show that:
(1) the cited standard applies; (2) the requirements of the standard
were not met; (3) employees were exposed to, or had access to,
the violative condition; and (4) the employer knew, or through the
exercise of reasonable diligence could have known, of the violative
condition.
Mowat, 148 Wn. App. at 924 (citing SuperValu, Inc. v. Dep't of Labor & Indus..
158Wn.2d422, 433, 144 P.3d 1160 (2006)).
WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a) states, "The employer shall provide adequate
handwashing facilities for use by employees exposed to lead in accordance with
WAC 296-155-140." WAC 296-155-140 states, in relevant part, "Clean, tepid
wash water, between 70 and 100 degrees Fahrenheit, shall be provided at all
construction sites." WAC 296-155-140(2)(a). The Board found that PAS had
violated these administrative provisions because employees were washing their
hands in buckets, and standing water in buckets is not clean water. PAS does
not dispute that standing water in buckets is not clean. Rather, it contendsthat
the testimony does not support a finding that buckets were the primary means by
which employees could wash their hands.
However, substantial evidence supports the Board's finding of fact. Arita
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No. 70451-6-1/9
and Santiago both testified that they washed their hands in buckets. Both
Bannick and Hansen observed buckets set up as hand washing facilities. Cantu
testified that employees washed their hands in a tub with no running water, and
that employees used the same tub to wash their equipment.
As PAS notes, there was some testimony to the contrary. Santiago
testified that there was a "hotsy" sprayer that emptied into a tub. Cantu testified
that there was a washing station operated by foot pump on the first floor.
However, "substantial evidence" does not mean "the only evidence." "It is for the
trier of fact to assess the credibility and weight to be attached to the evidence,
[and] to measure that evidence in the light of applicable legal requirements and
presumptions." Cook v. Cook, 80 Wn.2d 642, 646, 497 P.2d 584 (1972). Here,
several witnesses testified that employees used buckets to wash their hands.
Further, Cantu testified that employees washed their hands in a tub that was also
used to wash equipment. The Board gave more weight to the evidence that the
employees used buckets to wash their hands than to the scattered testimony
about sprayers and foot operated washing facilities. We will not disturb the
Board's determination.
PAS further contends that WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a) is a "performance
standard" and, as such, PAS should be afforded leeway in deciding how to
comply with the regulation. Thus, PAS asserts, it can use showers instead of
other hand washing facilities if it so chooses. PAS relies on Sec'v of Labor v.
Thomas Indus. Coatings. Inc., 21 O.S.H. Cas. (BNA) 2283, 2007 WL 4138237
(O.S.H.R.C. Nov. 1, 2007), in support of this contention. In that case, the
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No. 70451-6-1/10
Occupational Safety Health Review Commission differentiated between
"performance standards" and "specification standards." Thomas Indus. Coatings,
2007 WL 4138237 at *4. This distinction is irrelevant to the case at hand,
because PAS's contention fails regardless. Under federal law, performance
standards "are interpreted in light of what is reasonable." Thomas Indus.
Coatings, 2007 WL 4138237 at *4. Here, the Board found that it was not
reasonable to expect employees to use showers to wash their hands whenever
they took a short break. Thus, even if PAS had discretion in deciding how to
comply with WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a), the Board's findings preclude a
conclusion that PAS acted lawfully.
The Board's Finding of Fact 5 is supported by substantial evidence.
Ill
In the alternative, PAS contends that the Board erred by concluding that
its violation of WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a) was serious. This is so, it asserts,
because PAS's provision of showers provided equal or greater protection than
would have been provided by strict compliance with the administrative regulation.
We disagree.
"The standard for a 'serious' violation is whether there is 'a substantial
probability that death or serious physical harm could result.'" Mowat, 148 Wn.
App. at 929 (quoting RCW 49.17.180(6)). "Substantial probability" is defined as
"the likelihood that, should harm result from the violation, that harm could be
death or serious physical harm." Lee Cook Trucking &Logging v. Dep't of Labor
&Indus., 109 Wn. App. 471, 482, 36 P.3d 558 (2001). Here, Bannick testified
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No. 70451-6-1/11
that exposure to lead can result in "impact on . . . the blood forming systems,"
"reproductive hazards," and "neurological damage." No evidence to the contrary
was offered. Thus, the Department met its burden to prove that the violation was
serious.
Nevertheless, PAS contends that Phoenix Roofing, Inc. v. Dole, 874 F.2d
1027 (5th Cir. 1989), mandates that the violation be classified as general. This is
so, it asserts, because showers provide an equal, if not better, quality of
protection than what is mandated by WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a). Phoenix
Roofing does not support PAS's contention.4
In Phoenix Roofing, the employer was cited for violation of a regulation
requiring that a motion stopping device at the edge or a warning line six feet from
the edge be used when employees worked on a roof more than 50 feet wide.
874 F.2d at 1029-30. Instead of a motion stopping device or warning line, the
employer used two experienced employees whose sole duty was to warn
workers when they ventured too close to the roof's edge. Phoenix Roofing, 874
F.2d at 1030. Pursuant to federal regulations, monitors are permitted only when
the roof is less than 50 feet wide, or when employees are "working within 6 feet
of the edge where only a warning line is in place." Phoenix Roofing, 874 F.2d at
1030. The administrative law judge found that this constituted a serious violation.
Phoenix Roofing, 874 F.2d at 1032.
In reversing the administrative law judge, the appellate court noted that:
4The Department contends that we rejected the Fifth Circuit's analysis in our decision in
Mowat. Contrary to its assertion, this court in Mowat did not reject Phoenix Roofing, but rather
distinguished that case on its facts. 148 Wn. App. at 931.
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No. 70451-6-1/12
There are, conceptually, at least three circumstances under
which a violation may be considered de minimis: (1) Where no
injury will result, or any injury will be minor; (2) where the possibility
of injury is remote; or (3) where there is no significant difference
between the protection provided by the employer and that which
would be afforded by technical compliance with the standard.
Phoenix Roofing, 874 F.2d at 1032 (footnotes omitted). The facts in that case
established that "the citation was based only upon the compliance officer's
observation of employees working near the edge of the roof who, under the
regulations, could have been protected by monitors. The additional presence of
a warning line would be only for the protection of employees working further from
the perimeter." Phoenix Roofing, 874 F.2d at 1032. Under those circumstances,
the use of monitors "provided safety equal to or greater than that imposed by
regulation." Phoenix Roofing, 874 F.2d at 1032. The court thus held that
because the monitoring used by the employer did not "appreciably diminish" the
safety of its workers, the violation must be classified as de minimis. Phoenix
Roofing, 874 F.2d at 1033.
The employer bears the burden of proving that it did not appreciably
diminish the safety of its workers. Hackney, Inc. v. McLaughlin, 895 F.2d 1298,
1300 (10th Cir. 1990). Unlike in the employer in Phoenix Roofing, PAS did not
meet this burden. While Cantu and Santiago testified that they took a shower
when they left the shooting range, they did not testify that they used the shower
to wash their hands on other occasions. No testimony was presented
establishing that the employees used the showers after the work on the shooting
range was completed. Finally, as the Board found, showers do not serve the
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No. 70451-6-1/13
purpose of WAC 296-155-17619(5)(a), because an employee is unlikely to take a
shower when taking only a short work break.
Substantial evidence does not establish that the showers at the armory
"provided safety equal to or greater than that imposed by regulation." See
Phoenix Roofing. 874 F.2d at 1032. Accordingly, the Board did not err by
concluding that the violation was serious.
Affirmed.
We concur:
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