Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court's reversal of the Board's decision, finding that Morrison Knudsen's work at Harbor Island constituted hazardous waste cleanup operations subject to HAZWOPER regulations. Case remanded to Board to address the merits of the citation and violations.
What This Ruling Means
# Department of Labor & Industries v. Knudsen - Plain English Summary
## What Happened
The Department of Labor & Industries cited Morrison Knudsen for safety violations while the company was working on hazardous waste cleanup at Harbor Island. Morrison Knudsen disagreed with the citation, claiming the work didn't fall under hazardous waste cleanup rules.
## What the Court Decided
A court of appeals agreed with the Department of Labor & Industries. The judges ruled that Morrison Knudsen's work at Harbor Island was indeed hazardous waste cleanup that should follow strict safety regulations (called HAZWOPER regulations). The case was sent back to the Board to review the original safety violations and determine what penalties Morrison Knudsen should face.
## Why This Matters for Workers
This ruling protects workers on hazardous cleanup sites by requiring employers to follow tough safety standards. The decision means companies cannot avoid safety regulations by claiming their hazardous work doesn't qualify as "cleanup operations." Workers on similar projects now have clearer protection and can expect their employers to follow required safety protocols for handling dangerous materials.
This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.
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