Jury awards nearly $10 million to injured industrial worker

In 2006, an industrial worker was doused with acid in a Texas workplace accident. The worker, Jason Jenkins, suffered severe eye damage as a result. Jenkins sued for his injuries and was recently awarded $9.6 million dollars by a Houston jury.

The accident occurred when Jenkins was adding acid through an acid addition system while on the job at Equistar Chemicals. The jury found that the Dallas, Texas, company Occident Chemical Corporation was negligent in its design of the acid addition system.

In his workplace accident lawsuit, Jenkins alleged that the system lacked a pressure indicator and that it did not properly vent pressure. As a result, the pressure vented near Jenkins’ face, causing him to lose most of his vision in one of his eyes.

Both Occidental and Equistar were found responsible for the accident. Jenkins was also found to be 5% responsible.

To read more about this Texas on-the-job accident lawsuit, click here for the full story.

Fears | Nachawati represents workers who have been injured on the job. To learn more about your potential work site accident personal injury claim, contact us today for a free legal consultation. You can contact us by email at info@fnlawfirm.com or call us on our toll-free helpline at 1.866.705.7584.

 

Texas worker killed on the job, local residents protest

The waste-processing worker who was severely burned in an on-the-job accident has died. His death has sparked a series of protests from Houston, Texas, citizens who live near the plant, CES Environmental Services.

The victim, who officials have declined to publicly identify, was cleaning a tank, which had been carrying ethanol, when the accident occurred. The accident took place when the lantern the employee was using to examine the tanker caused an ethanol flash. The Harris County Medical Examiner’s Office says that the worker suffered third-degree burns over most of his body as a result of the explosion.

This worker’s death was actually the third fatal on-the-job accident at a regional CES operation since December. The two other accidents did not take place at the same operation where Tuesday’s explosion took place. Other incidents, however, have occurred there in the past nine months, including one fire and two explosions.

Back in January, Houston sued CES Environmental Services after two explosions at the operation shook the ground and sent debris flying into the yards of nearby homes. The lawsuit sought to have the facility temporarily shut down. A settlement was reached in February.

Since the time of the lawsuit, both OSHA and the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality has alleged numerous violations of safety regulations against CES.

For a more in-depth look at this Texas workplace accident, click here for the complete story.

The Texas personal injury attorneys of Fears | Nachawati represent the victims of workplace accidents in bringing suits against the responsible parties. In tragic cases of fatal accidents, Fears | Nachawati provides legal representation to the victim’s family in bringing a Texas wrongful death lawsuit.

 

For a free consultation with one of our Texas personal injury lawyers, email us at info@fnlawfirm.com or call us on our toll-free number at 1.866.705.7584.