The Eleventh Circuit affirmed the OSHA citation against Roberts Sand Company, finding substantial evidence that the employer violated the general duty clause by failing to adopt feasible abatement measures (sloping excavation walls) to prevent a hazard that caused an employee injury from falling clay.
What This Ruling Means
# Roberts Sand Company v. Secretary of Labor
**What Happened**
An employee at Roberts Sand Company was injured when clay fell from an excavation wall. Federal workplace safety inspectors (OSHA) cited the company for violating safety rules by not taking reasonable steps to prevent this type of hazard.
**The Court's Decision**
The appeals court sided with the government. The court found solid evidence that Roberts Sand Company failed to implement a simple safety measure—sloping the excavation walls at a safer angle—that could have prevented the injury. The company had to accept this safety citation.
**Why This Matters for Workers**
This ruling reinforces that employers must take practical, achievable steps to protect workers from known hazards. Companies cannot ignore safety problems just because fixes exist. If workers are injured due to preventable hazards, regulators can hold employers accountable. The decision strengthens worker protections in construction and excavation work, industries where injuries are common.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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