OSHA Proposes $200K In Fines For Hazards At High Liner Foods

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration cited High Liner Foods for 17 alleged violations of workplace health and safety standards at its Portsmouth, N.H.-based factory. Two of the citations were identified as willful, which OSHA defines as “committed with plain indifference to or intentional disregard for worker safety and health.”

The proposed fines total $214,000, the agency said in a news release.

OSHA issued two willful citations following an investigation in which it allegedly discovered the company failed to properly inspect and test its anhydrous ammonia piping system, which was corroded and encased in ice multiple locations. The company also failed to correct previously identified problems in the system, the U.S. Labor Department agency said.

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