Business

$74,000 fine proposed for roofer after a worker’s fatal fall from a Broward mansion

A previously-fined Pompano Beach roofer repeated the safety violation, which led to the death of a 25-year-old employee working on a Davie mansion, the U.S. Department of Labor’s OSHA arm alleges.

The Occupational Safety and Health Administration wants to fine J & L Roofing, a company run by president Juan Alcocer and vice president Maria Delgado, $74,751 for four workplace safety violations after the January tragedy. Two of the violations are classified as Other-Than-Serious, one violation is classified as Serious and still another is classified as Willful.

OSHA calls a Willful violation “a violation in which the employer either knowingly failed to comply with a legal requirement (purposeful disregard) or acted with plain indifference to employee safety.”

Phone messages left at numbers given for Alcocer and Delgado weren’t answered.

Back in 2018, J & L Roofing paid a $3,880 fine for failure to provide fall protection on a low-slope roof at a two-story condominium in Tamarac. This Jan. 19, J & L had people working atop a five-bedroom, six-bathroom, 5,177-sq. ft. home in Stonebrook Estates in Davie.

The Davie house from which a J & L Roofing employee fell and suffered injuries leading to his death in January.
The Davie house from which a J & L Roofing employee fell and suffered injuries leading to his death in January. Broward County Property Records

The Citation and Notification of Penalty says “employees were exposed to a 25-foot fall hazard when engaged in roofing activities of a two-story residence with a roof pitch of 5:12, without a means of fall protection.”

That’s the Willful violation. OSHA says the worker fell from the roof to a lower level and then to the ground. He was taken to a hospital, where he died 29 days later from his injuries.

The Serious violation dings J & L for not providing effective training for employees in recognizing fall hazards and proper safety procedures.

“Had J & L Roofing Inc. ensured that its workers were protected from the construction industry’s leading cause of death, a young man’s life could have been spared,” said OSHA Area Office Director Condell Eastmond. “Instead, a family and a community are left to grieve and an employer is learning a painful lesson that federal workplace safety standards exist to help prevent needless and unnecessary tragedies.”

David J. Neal
Miami Herald
Since 1989, David J. Neal’s domain at the Miami Herald has expanded to include writing about Panthers (NHL and FIU), Dolphins, old school animation, food safety, fraud, naughty lawyers, bad doctors and all manner of breaking news. He drinks coladas whole. He does not work Indianapolis 500 Race Day.
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