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Osseo -- Michigan
Man staggers 300 feet on fire
Explosion killed five
Another explosion killed seven

-- The explosion that killed five people at a fireworks factory has been classified as accidental.

The explosion at a Fireworks Company near Osseo could have been caused by something as simple as static electricity.   The sweep of the door as the owner entered the building might have been enough to ignite the explosion.

''It looks like he was just walking in the door, and that's why he was able to stagger 300 feet away on fire.''   He died from burns over 85 percent of his body.

His wife and three employees died of carbon-monoxide poisoning inside the building.  The deadly blast followed an explosion that killed seven people at the factory.

 

Osseo -- Michigan
Federal agents probe Michigan fireworks explosion.
The blast sent debris flying hundreds of yards
and could be heard 20 miles away.

-- U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms agents combed the scene Saturday of an explosion that obliterated a fireworks factory a day earlier. Six women and one man working inside the plant were unaccounted for and feared dead.

A spokesman for U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board said it too was sending investigators to the site.

Friday's explosion scattered debris hundreds of yards in every direction. Twelve people were treated for smoke inhalation at the scene, and one survivor was being treated at a nearby hospital, said Hillsdale County Sheriff Stanley Burchardt.

From 20 to 25 people usually work at the factory, but an unknown number were on the property at the time, Burchardt said. The seven missing people were all in the building when it exploded, he said.

"It's just like a bomb was dropped," the sheriff said. "I suspect they are gone. There were body remains in the area."

The Independence Professional Fireworks Co. factory, a converted farmhouse, was so thoroughly leveled that only a slab of concrete foundation remained.

Independence Professional Fireworks manufactured fireworks for Fourth of July celebrations and other events Several cars and trucks parked nearby were reduced to heaps of charred and tangled metal.

The Friday afternoon blast sent a huge cloud of smoke into the sky and could be heard for at least 20 miles. The factory was located in Jefferson Township, southeast of Hillsdale near the Michigan state line with Ohio and Indiana, about 90 miles southwest of Detroit.

"When it happened, it shook the post office window," said Gina Price, postmaster of the Osseo post office, about five miles from the factory. "It looked like a mushroom cloud."

Independence Professional manufactured fireworks for Fourth of July celebrations. The company conducted between 75 and 80 fireworks shows each year, founder Bill Richardson said last year.

 

Osseo -- Michigan
Explosion at Michigan fireworks factory kills at least four workers.

-- At least four people were killed Monday in an explosion and fire that tore through a fireworks factory near Osseo, Michigan where seven other workers perished in a similar blast three months ago.

The explosion occurred around 8:30 a.m. at the Independence Professional Fireworks Company. The plant is located in a farming area about 90 miles southwest of Detroit and 15 miles north of the Michigan-Ohio border.

The blast left only one wall standing in a building where fireworks are assembled, roughly 100 yards from a structure that was completely destroyed December 11, Hillsdale County Sheriff Stan Burchardt said.

The previous explosion killed six women and one man while injuring 13 others at the plant. Twenty-two people were working at the time of the explosion. Federal, state and local investigators determined that blast occurred in a shell assembly room, leaving only a concrete slab with debris and human remains scattered over a wide area. Investigators said they might never fully understand what caused the explosion.

Independence is one of the largest producers of fireworks in the US, producing an estimated 1.3 million fireworks shells a year. Independence makes all of its products by hand, using materials like nitrates, sulfurs, charcoal and black powder. The December 1998 explosion was the second major blast in the last 10 years at the 26-year-old company.

According to Maura Campbell, spokesperson for the Department of Consumer and Industry Services which licenses fireworks manufacturers, the state did not revoke or suspend the company's license after last December's explosion. She said the factory was free to resume its operations, pending the outcome of an investigation. The investigation "was all but ready to be made public, and now this," Ms. Campbell said.

 

Osseo -- Michigan
Michigan fireworks factory cited for repeated safety violations
before fatal blast

-- The Michigan fireworks factory where an explosion Monday killed five people was guilty of "serious and willful safety violations" according to state officials who investigated an earlier blast at the plant that left seven workers dead. A forthcoming Michigan Occupational Safety and Health Administration (MIOSHA) report on the December 11, 1998 explosion cited Independence Professional Fireworks Co. for violations that posed a substantial probability of death or serious physical harm to workers.

However, neither MIOSHA nor the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF), which regulates fireworks manufacturers, ordered the factory closed. Independence is among the country's largest makers of display fireworks shells.

Another explosion Monday morning at 8:30 a.m. ripped through the plant near Osseo, Michigan, a small town in rural Hillsdale County, some 100 miles southwest of Detroit. Flames shot through a small shack where workers were assembling fireworks, only 100 yards from a structure that was destroyed in a massive explosion last December. Pittsford Fire Chief Craig Winner said it appeared that a firework had detonated on Monday.

The bodies of two men and two women were found inside the building. Company owner Robert Slayton was found alive outside, but died in the hospital later from critical burns. Victims were burned so badly that inspectors were using dental records to establish their identification. According to family, coworkers and friends, those who were killed were Leah Dunning, 34, a mother of three; Rick Wiggins, 30; Scott Burton; and the company owner and his wife Patricia Slayton.

The blast shocked and angered the community of 1,387 people, who were still collecting donations for a monument to honor the seven workers killed on December 11, 1998. Six women and one man were killed and another 13 were injured. The two explosions in little more than three months have killed half of the company's work force.

The lack of opportunities in the farming community apparently induced some of the workers to return despite the first explosion. Tammy Sykes said her neighbor Leah Dunning had been concerned about going back. "She wasn't crazy about going to back to work after the explosion in December. But it was a good paying job for around here," Sykes said.

Walter Adams, a former employee, told the Detroit Free Press about the hazardous nitrates, sulfurs, charcoal and black powder which the workers handled each day. Adams said, "We would roll the mixtures together, dry them and then wrap them." Inside the building "there were raw powders and such. They don't explode that much, but they burn real hot and real fast. I'd have to say that this happened because the stuff is so volatile. Even static electricity can set it off," Adams said. "We had some solutions that we had to mix by hand, using our fingers and going very slowly since even the friction could cause it to ignite."

Local residents who had sought to keep the factory closed after the first blast were outraged when the company resumed operations about a week ago. "We were so angry when we heard them testing fireworks. We didn't think they'd let them reopen. We didn't want them to," Paula Watters, who lives a quarter mile from the fireworks site, told the Toledo Blade. Ms. Watters' cousin, Joyce Carr, died in last December's blast. "Now we're reliving it all over again. Every time a car backfires we go crazy," she said.

Ms. Watters said she called 911 and the BATF to complain and urged her neighbors to do the same. But local officials said they were powerless because federal firearms and explosive regulations governed the plant's operations. The BATF, the state police fire marshal's office and the Hillsdale County sheriff's office, which for the most part have not finished their investigation of December's explosion, claimed they were not aware that the company was operating.

Mark Hady, BATF resident agent in charge, said the factory's license had not been revoked after the December explosion but refused to explain why. Detective Sgt. Ken Hersha of the State Police fire marshal division said the company kept its license because investigators could find nothing that contributed to the December blast's origin.

Kalmin Smith, the deputy director of the state's Consumer and Industry Services Department, a MIOSHA agency, said the state can only shut a company down if it finds clear and convincing evidence of an imminent threat of danger or death to employees. Even if MIOSHA had found several safety violations, he said, these may not have been the cause of either one of the explosions. "They don't have to report to us what they're doing," he added. "I assume they were operating normally until today."

Even before the December 1998 blast the company had a long record of accidents and safety violations. Disaster was narrowly averted in August 1983 when employees fled a building before an explosion at the plant, then located in Exeter Township in Monroe County. Township officials and residents complained to the BATF, and the company, then owned by William Richardson, moved to Hillsdale County the next year. Richardson, now listed as a consultant to the company, then sold Independence to Richard Slayton.

Safety inspectors issued 10 violation notices to the company in 1985 and 1986. In November 1991 another 19 citations were issued, including 9 for serious violations, but the company was only fined $1,200. Some of the violations included an open flame in a furnace in a building with fireworks, employees wearing clothing that could allow sparks to ignite and the lack of eye protection for workers.

According to inspection records, the company's owners fought many of the violations, appealing some for many years before complying. In September 1994 an inspector said Richardson angrily confronted her over a violation. In a report she said, "He became very agitated and said that ATF was the most despised agency in the federal government because of Waco and petty violations such as the one issued to Independence."

Safety inspectors have not been inside the plant since 1994 despite its unsafe record. The December 1998 explosion was the worst fatal accident in Michigan history. The second worst was the February 1 explosion at the Ford Rouge complex in Dearborn, which claimed the lives of six workers.

Over the last two decades successive administrations in state government, both Democratic and Republican, have cut funding for safety inspections. Between 1980 and 1998 the number of safety inspections carried out by the Michigan Occupational and Safety Administration fell by 73 percent, from 21,046 to 5,778. MIOSHA has only 42 inspectors to cover 216,000 workplaces in the state. Last year 1,273 industrial locations out of 16,800 were inspected.

 

Osseo -- Michigan
Four die in fireworks factory explosion

-- A fireworks factory where seven workers died in an explosion in December was hit by another blast and fire Monday that killed four people.

One man also was critically burned after an explosion around 8:30 a.m. at the Independence Professional Fireworks Co., Sheriff Stan Burchardt said. The fire destroyed a building just 100 yards from the structure that was wrecked in December.

Agents with the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, which investigated the December blast, were on the scene again Monday.

"Obviously, because this is a tragedy twice in a row, we're going to look at everything from a public safety standpoint to make sure nobody else gets hurt here," said Mark Hady, an ATF agent. "They won't be operating for quite some time, if ever at all, again."

A man who answered the telephone at the plant, 80 miles southwest of Detroit, refused to comment.

Authorities were trying to identify the victims and said it was unclear whether they all worked at the plant.

On Dec. 11, a blast at the factory killed seven people and injured 13. Investigators said they may never fully understand what caused that blast, which happened in a room where workers packed fireworks with black powder and wrapped them with a substance similar to wallpaper paste.

Melinda Kays, who owns Mel's Diner, a mile and a half from the factory, said Monday's fire didn't compare to December's. "The last time it sounded like a sonic boom. This time, no one heard a thing," she said.

Independence is one of the largest makers of fireworks in the United States. The 26-year-old company made an estimated 1.3 million fireworks shells last year. In an average year, it provides fireworks for up to 65 Fourth of July celebrations.

Maura Campbell, spokeswoman for the Department of Consumer and Industry Services, which licenses fireworks manufacturers, said the state had planned to issue a report about the December blast and possible citations next week.

"They couldn't pay me enough to go to work there," said Jesse Hill, who lives in nearby Hillsdale. "A lot of people are concerned.