Roofing Safety
Washington Contractor Facing $300K in Fines After Roofer Injured in Fall
Contractor claims safety rope broke but investigators say otherwise

L&I photo shows the two-story house where Asset Roofing Company employee fell from the roof.
Image courtesy of Washington State Department of Labor & Industries.
The Washington State Department of Labor & Industries slapped a Snohomish, Wash. roofing company with more than $300,000 in fines after a roofer laying shingles fell from a two-story roof and was hospitalized.
According to a news release, Labor & Industries received notice that a worker was injured when his fall protection rope failed to stop him from hitting the ground. L&I opened an inspection, but had to issue a subpoena to force Asset Roofing Company to share the address of the incident.
When inspectors arrived at the scene, L&I says it had been altered, and only a portion of the rope involved in the incident was left hanging from the roof on the back of the house.
Asset Roofing’s owner said the fall protection rope broke, causing the roofer to fall to the ground. Inspectors determined the roofer slipped on the underlayment, but with too much slack in the rope, hit the ground without activating any part of the fall protection system.
L&I noted that the rope was not frayed as if it had broken. Rather, it appeared to have been cut after the worker fell. A local fall protection system manufacturer agreed with the agency’s findings.
“The owner of Asset Roofing would rather blame the equipment, but after eight fall protection violations in four years, it’s clear this worker was hurt by a blatant disregard for safety,” said Craig Blackwood, assistant director for L&I’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health. “Next time, we could be talking about a fatality.”
Inspectors also found the rope was manufactured to have a minimum breaking strength of 3,600 pounds instead of the required 5,000 pounds.
“Even if there hadn’t been too much slack in the rope, it was not strong enough for the task,” said Blackwood.
Hundreds of Thousands in Fines and Unpaid Premiums
In addition to the $322,646 in fines for this recent citation, Asset Roofing owes L&I more than half a million dollars for past safety violations, unpaid industrial insurance premiums and wage payment violations. Money collected from fines goes into the workers’ compensation supplemental pension fund, helping workers and families of those who have died on the job.
Asset Roofing's past safety violations include roofers not wearing fall protection while working at heights of 16 feet or more, near unguarded skylights, above steel spikes lining the top portion of a fence, and above rebar sticking out of the ground below.
The company is appealing the latest citation.
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