Mining Incidents

Ash Grove Cement CompanyController

MSHA Controller ID: M00051
Fatalities
5
Total incidents
1,461
Mines on record
62
Years on record
2000–2018

Safety benchmark

Recorded fatalities relative to other controllers with a fatal MSHA history. Percentile is computed across the 590 controllers with at least one recorded fatality.

Fatality-count percentile
94th

More recorded fatalities than 94% of controllers on file.

Rank
#38of 590

Position when controllers are sorted by recorded fatalities.

Vs industry mean
2.5×

Industry mean: 2.0 fatalities per fatal-history controller.

This controller
5
Industry mean
2
Industry median
1
Peers at similar incident volume

Methodology: percentile and rank computed across MSHA controllers with at least one recorded fatality. Industry mean is the average across that same population. Peers are sampled by closest total-incident count, regardless of fatality outcome.

Top causes

  • SLIP OR FALL OF PERSON2 fatalities · 182 non-fatal
  • POWERED HAULAGE1 fatality · 45 non-fatal
  • HANDLING OF MATERIALS367 non-fatal
  • HANDTOOLS (NONPOWERED)128 non-fatal
  • MACHINERY108 non-fatal
  • OTHER52 non-fatal

Incident timeline

2018
25
2017
50
2016
51 (1f)
2015
48
2014
80
2013
62
2012
54
2011
53
2010
47
2009
62
2008
107
2007
61 (1f)
2006
60
2005
95
2004
116 (1f)
2003
29

Operators under this controller

Mines on record

Fatalities under this controller

5 recorded
Fall from machine

Employee was found on the floor of the #2 slurry tank. Employee had significant head injuries and was pronounced dead by the Justice of the Peace. The accident scene is currently under a Section 103(k) order and subject to MSHA investigation.

Drowning

Two front end loaders, one on each side, were being used to position an 80 foot section of 18 inch diameter pipe in the waters edge. When the loader on the right was about 25-30 feet from the lake, the bank started to cave in. Within 3 minutes the loader was submerged in about 20 feet of water.

Fall from scaffolds, walkways, platforms

Truck driver's lid got stuck on safety cage and when he tried to pry it free, it came loose and sprung and hit him. He fell 11 feet. This was told to me by Ralph Rodriguez.