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Farm labor contractor fined in worker's death



By GARANCE BURKE, AP
24 July 2008 @ 09:37 am EST

FRESNO, Calif. - The employer of a pregnant teenager who died of heat stroke after pruning grapevines for nine hours in hot weather was hit Wednesday with the highest fine ever issued to a California farming operation.

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The California Division of Occupational Safety and Health fined Merced Farm Labor $262,700 for violating eight workplace safety rules. The agency said some of the violations were intentional. A criminal investigation also is under way.

State authorities believe 17-year-old Maria Isabel Vasquez Jimenez died on May 14 because her supervisors denied her access to shade and water as she pruned white wine grapevines for more than nine hours in nearly triple-digit heat at a Central Valley vineyard.

"There was virtually a complete absence of shade or water, two of the very few tools that employers and employees have to fight the heat," said Len Welsh, chief of the division known as Cal-OSHA. "It's just too bad we can't undo the consequences of those violations."

"I feel good because at least they're being fined for not doing anything when all that happened," said her fiance, 19-year-old Florentino Bautista, who is back working in the grape vines for a different employer. "Now we'll have to see if they keep acting the same way."

Inspectors found that Merced Farm Labor not only failed to provide water but deliberately neglected to train workers and managers on how to stay safe while working in punishing temperatures. The company also willfully skirted preparing for a medical emergency, the agency said.

Those three violations are classified the most serious and each carries a $70,000 penalty, the highest afforded under civil law.

The company has 15 business days to file an appeal, and if it does so, the case could go before an administrative law judge who could reduce, accept or increase the fines, according to Dean Fryer, a Cal-OSHA spokesman.

San Joaquin County authorities say they have started a criminal investigation into Vasquez Jimenez's death, but they won't discuss the probe further while it's ongoing.

Attorney James Gumberg, who represents Atwater-based Merced Farm Labor, did not return a call seeking comment Wednesday.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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