A Wisconsin hardwood flooring manufacturer continues to ignore federal safety and health regulations and expose workers to multiple hazards at its Laona mill, federal inspectors found.
Inspectors with the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration conducted an inspection at WD Flooring LLC under the agency’s National Emphasis Program for amputation hazards on Sept. 5, 2023, and opened a concurrent health inspection that noted deficiencies in the employer’s hearing conservation program and a lack of training and information provided to employees about hazardous chemicals in the workplace.
OSHA cited WD Flooring LLC for four repeat, 28 serious, and six other-than-serious violations, with a proposed penalty of $269,662.
Specifically, OSHA found WD Flooring failed to:
- Use required lockout/tagout procedures.
- Train workers in lockout/tagout procedures.
- Install adequate guarding to protect workers from contact with operating machine parts on rollers, woodworking presses, upcut saws, chains, sprockets, belts, pulleys and shafts.
- Protect workers from fall hazards.
- Repair forklifts.
- Operate forklifts safely.
- Provide adequate personal protective equipment.
- Protect workers from electrical hazards.
- Implement a hearing conservation program, including training and hearing protection.
- Record injuries in a timely manner.
- Train employees on the hazards associated with chemicals in the workplace.
WD Flooring employs about 45 workers at its Laona facility.
Source: OSHA
Topics Manufacturing
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
What Analysts Are Saying About the 2026 P/C Insurance Market
Insurance Issue Leaves Some Players Off World Baseball Classic Rosters
Florida’s Commercial Clearinghouse Bill Stirring Up Concerns for Brokers, Regulators
Insurify Starts App With ChatGPT to Allow Consumers to Shop for Insurance 

