Employee was performing EE's job task and started feeling symptoms of heat stress. EE was light headed and requested to be checked out. Onsite Safety rep took the employee to the ER to be checked out. EE was operating a front end loader and the AC worked properly when EE did the pre op, but started having issues with the AC around 8:30am.
Search the record
Every injury and fatality MSHA has on file. Filter by state, year, sector, classification, experience, or any keyword from the investigator's narrative.
- Total incidents
- 739,488
- Of which fatal
- 3,112
- Years on record
- 1983–2026
- Classifications
- 20
Alert me on this search
Email me when a new incident matches these filters. One confirmation email; unsubscribe anytime.
5 matching records
Showing all 5Normal shoveling task, it was EE's first day and EE was being trained on task. EE's left elbow popped and EE lost strength in EE's arm and hand. Supervisor took employee to the urgent care to have it looked at.
Operator was operating a Komatsu WA 500, driving from the fuel island back to the area EE was working. EE hit a rutted area and the front end loader bounced, causing the operator to hit EE's head and jamb EE's thumb into the joystick.
Contractor operating a telehandler near the dry plant load-out struck a contract employee in the lower back with the forks.
After a bad storm went through the area, the employee was shoveling sand off the plant concrete slab when a football size chunk of sand fell from a hopper that EE got close to, striking EE on top of the head and hurting EE's neck.