BWAY Corporation

Caught in running equipment or machinery during maintenance, cleaning — Crushing injuries — LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP, New Jersey

HOSPITALIZED — Worker hospitalized after incident at BWAY Corporation in LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP, New Jersey
Employer BWAY Corporation
Address 6 Litho Road
City, State ZIP LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP, New Jersey 08648
Report ID 20190910110
Event Date September 26, 2019
Outcome Hospitalized
Nature of Injury Crushing injuries
Body Part Hand(s), unspecified
Event Type Caught in running equipment or machinery during maintenance, cleaning
Source of Injury Painting, priming, metal coating machinery
Secondary Source Brooms, mops, and other cleaning tools
Industry (NAICS) 326199
Inspection # 1435805
GPS Coordinates 40.27000, -74.70000

Location Map

Incident Narrative

An employee was operating a machine that applies coating to metal sheets used in the manufacture of steel pails. The employee attempted to clean the rear of a catch tray with a wiping rag. The rag entered a gap between the tray and the composite roller and became caught in an in-running nip point between two rollers. The employee's right hand was pulled into the rollers, resulting in a crushing injury. The machine was in motion at the time of the incident.

Incident Summary

On September 26, 2019, a worker at BWAY Corporation in LAWRENCE TOWNSHIP, New Jersey suffered crushing injuries to the hand(s), unspecified. The incident was classified as caught in running equipment or machinery during maintenance, cleaning, with painting, priming, metal coating machinery identified as the source of injury. The worker was hospitalized.

Context

OSHA has recorded 5,298 severe injury reports involving "Caught in running equipment or machinery during maintenance, cleaning" incidents in our database. Browse all Caught in running equipment or machinery during maintenance, cleaning injuries.

See all reports for BWAY Corporation.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Workers injured on the job have the right to medical treatment covered by workers' compensation, wage replacement benefits during recovery, and protection against retaliation for reporting the injury. You have the right to file a complaint with OSHA if you believe your workplace is unsafe, and OSHA cannot reveal your identity to your employer without your consent. You also have the right to see your OSHA 300 injury log. If your employer denies a workers' comp claim, you can appeal through your state's workers' compensation board. An occupational health attorney can advise on complex cases involving denied claims or third-party liability.

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About This OSHA Report

This is a severe injury report filed with OSHA. Employers are required to report all work-related fatalities and severe injuries within 8 to 24 hours. Browse more reports by employer, state, or industry below.

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