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Impact Plastics employee Johnny Peterson honored for heroism during Hurricane Helene
Impact Plastics employee Johnny Peterson honored for heroism during Hurricane Helene

Yahoo

time29-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Impact Plastics employee Johnny Peterson honored for heroism during Hurricane Helene

ERWIN, Tenn. (WJHL) – Johnny Peterson has been considered a hero within the Erwin community since Hurricane Helene struck. During Monday's Board of Mayor and Aldermen meeting, one local representative ensured that his sacrifice wasn't forgotten. Peterson was one of six employees at Impact Plastics who died during Hurricane Helene. Peterson died while trying to save his co-workers. His daughter, Alexa Peterson, said Johnny was a selfless man. 'To know that other people appreciate him and that they see the sacrifice,' she said. 'It eases the pain of his death in some way.' District Four State Representative Renea Jones put a stamp on Johnny's heroic acts, issuing a proclamation to honor him. 'All the things he did that day impacted not only that day, but the recovery as well,' Jones said. Johnny's family attended the meeting, accepting the proclamation in his honor. Alexa said she thinks her father would be happy with the recognition. 'He wasn't very extravagant,' she said. 'I don't know that he would have felt super comfortable if he had been here, but I think he would have felt proud to have been recognized for what he did.' As many move forward and continue to rebuild, the Peterson family's process will look much different. 'As a county, I hope we can rebuild and move forward,' Alexa said. 'As a family, I don't really know what that looks like. We're just taking it one day at a time.' Rep. Jones said she hopes the proclamation will serve as guidance to the county. 'I hope it helps some to heal,' she said. 'I hope it helps to motivate.' When asked what they would say to Johnny if he were here, Alexa gave one sentence: 'We miss you,' she said. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Tennessee OSHA issues no citations for Erwin plastics plant where employees died in Helene flood
Tennessee OSHA issues no citations for Erwin plastics plant where employees died in Helene flood

Yahoo

time10-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Tennessee OSHA issues no citations for Erwin plastics plant where employees died in Helene flood

Flood waters in East Tennessee. (Photo: Brandon Hull/Office of the Governor) Tennessee's workplace safety agency concluded that an East Tennessee plastics plant where five employees died after being swept away by Hurricane Helene floodwaters 'exercised reasonable diligence' in dismissing employees that day. The Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration (TOSHA) issued its report on the Impact Plastics plant in Erwin, Tennessee on April 2. The agency found that because work had stopped and employees left the building, 'the tragic deaths of the Impact Plastics employees were not work-related and therefore do not fall within its jurisdiction.' The agency did not issue any citations. The inspection report comes as the family of Johnny Peterson, one of the employees killed in the Sept. 27 flood, moves forward with a lawsuit against the company. The suit alleges that Impact Plastics did not release employees with enough time to escape the rising water. 'TOSHA's report ignores multiple witnesses' testimonies, critical text messages, emergency alert logs, and photographic evidence that tell the real story about Impact Plastics' fatal failures,' Zack Lawson, an attorney representing Peterson's family in the lawsuit against the company, stated. 'We're grateful that in America, juries — not bureaucrats citing unnamed sources — will decide the truth based on all the evidence.' Impact Plastics has repeatedly denied wrongdoing and issued a statement on April 2 welcoming TOSHA's findings. 'These past months, Impact Plastics and its President and Founder Gerald O'Connor have cooperated with the official agencies investigating the flood and events of that day. The facts and the truth are now known,' an attorney representing Impact Plastics stated. Internal review from plastics plant where three died finds 'there was time to escape' flood Peterson, four other Impact Plastics employees and one independent contractor were swept away after the semi-trailer truck bed they sought refuge in was toppled by rushing water and debris. Five other employees who were swept into the water were later rescued by helicopter about half a mile downstream. TOSHA's investigation included site visits, witness interviews, review of surveillance footage and collaboration with law enforcement. The report notes that Impact Plastics' workplace safety records were destroyed or lost in the flood, and 'phone service disruptions, language barriers and other challenges' made communication with witnesses difficult. The investigation report laid out a timeline of that morning. The National Weather Service released its first flash flood warning alert for Unicoi County at 9:14 a.m., during the company's morning meeting. Employees were told by managers or other employees to move their vehicles to higher ground between 10 a.m. and 10:30 a.m., when water began to fill the parking lot, the report states. The site, which lies in a flood plain, lost power at 10:39 a.m. By 10:51 a.m., 'employees were reportedly told they could leave, although accounts of this directive varied,' according to the report. Body of last Impact Plastics worker found month after Helene The ongoing lawsuit against Impact Plastics contests this timeline, citing text messages sent by Peterson to his family before his death. A message to Peterson's daughter indicated senior management had not dismissed employees by 10:51 a.m. Employees realized they were trapped around 11:12 a.m., according to a text Peterson sent to his father. Peterson understood employees were dismissed only after senior management exited the property around 11:35 a.m., the lawsuit states. While most employees evacuated, some remained or returned to South Industrial Drive, according to the TOSHA report. 'Witnesses and evacuated employees could not clearly explain' why some people did not leave, but the report noted that some witnesses said they were afraid to drive through floodwater, they felt unable to leave by vehicle or on foot, or they believed that the flooding would not worsen. TOSHA found 'no evidence that employees were threatened with termination or forced to work beyond a safe evacuation point.' While TOSHA does not have a rule requiring employers to develop site-specific severe weather emergency plans, the agency did recommend that Impact Plastics create one and train employees and managers on evacuation during different types of severe weather. TOSHA Investigation Summary – Impact Plastics 04022025

Attorney for Impact Plastics employees responds to TOSHA findings
Attorney for Impact Plastics employees responds to TOSHA findings

Yahoo

time04-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Attorney for Impact Plastics employees responds to TOSHA findings

JOHNSON CITY, Tenn. (WJHL) – An attorney representing several Impact Plastics workers and their families is disputing parts of the Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration's (TOSHA) findings that were released Wednesday. This comes as a result of TOSHA's investigation into the events at Impact Plastics on Sept. 27, 2024, when Hurricane Helene caused fatal floods to rip through Unicoi County. TOSHA: No citations for Impact Plastics, Helene deaths weren't work-related Milberg law firm represents six Impact Plastics employees or their families. Greg Coleman, a partner at the firm, told News Channel 11 the firm has several issues with TOSHA's report. He specifically cited a reference to a bilingual employee on site who was told to advise the Hispanic workers to leave while everyone was still in the facility. 'That person happens to be my client,' Coleman said. 'Our client. The firm's client. And I can tell you with utmost certainty that that did not happen. She was never advised by anyone in upper management to tell the Hispanic workers or others to leave until it was far, far, far too late.' Coleman also pointed to the fact that Impact Plastics was the only business in the area that sustained loss of life. '[Impact] Plastics was the only business that had any death or tragedy occur,' Coleman said. 'All of the other businesses in that industrial park area where the hurricane and its flood waters hit, everybody else evacuated timely. Everybody else was told to go home timely, but not Impact Plastics employees.' He claims the company ignored early warning signs and called the employees in early because they were behind in production. 'My client, the bilingual employee, along with some others, initially were asked by Impact to be there early to help with production because they were so far behind,' Coleman said. 'That's why they were even there to begin with. To come in early, to start catching up, because this was an important order. They were behind in production. They needed to get it out, and so that's a very, very relevant fact as to why anyone was even there to begin with. And so that's what happened that day.' Coleman also said there are aspects of the report he and his firm agree with. 'There was not proper training,' Coleman said. 'The training, if it ever existed, was absolutely not implemented at the time all of this took place, that the management had plenty of time to make a decision to say, 'Okay, we want these folks out by X' because that's exactly what every other business in that area did and did it safely. Those things that TOSHA highlighted in the report as to that property are accurate.' Despite the report, the Milberg attorneys are ramping up their planned civil lawsuits against Impact Plastics. 'We don't plan on stopping until, as I like to say, the court of last resort, whether that's the Supreme Court or any other courts below, have told us to put the pen down.' The planned civil lawsuit must be filed within a year of the event. Coleman told News Channel 11 that it will happen sooner rather than later. News Channel 11 reached out to Impact Plastics Thursday to respond to Coleman's claims, but the company did not provide a response. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Deaths of Tennessee factory workers in Hurricane Helene flooding was 'not work-related,' state agency finds
Deaths of Tennessee factory workers in Hurricane Helene flooding was 'not work-related,' state agency finds

Yahoo

time03-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Deaths of Tennessee factory workers in Hurricane Helene flooding was 'not work-related,' state agency finds

Tennessee's workplace safety agency has absolved a plastics plant of responsibility in the deaths of six workers who were swept away by floodwaters from Hurricane Helene in September. The Sept. 27 deaths gained national attention when community members and relatives of the mostly Latino plant employees questioned why they hadn't been dismissed from work early enough to escape the record levels of rain that overcame the plastics factory in Erwin and the only road out. The report from the Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration (TOSHA) published Wednesday, said that because 'work operations had stopped and employees had left the building,' the deaths were not work-related and thus not within its jurisdiction. 'After considering the evidence," Chris Cannon, a spokesman with the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development, said, "TOSHA determined that company management exercised reasonable diligence in dismissing employees and providing them sufficient time to leave the facility safely.' A criminal probe by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation into the deaths is still underway, said Leslie Earhart, the bureau's spokesperson. Five employees and one contractor were killed when the semi-truck trailer they had sought refuge on was overtaken by raging floodwaters. They were Monica Hernandez-Corona, 44; Bertha Mendoza, 56; Johnny Peterson, 55; Lidia Verdugo Gastelum, 63; Rosa Maria Andrade Reynoso, 29; and Sibrina Barnett, 53. Six others were tossed from the truck bed and later rescued. Attorneys representing relatives of some of the deceased employees rejected the probe's conclusions. 'TOSHA's report ignores multiple witnesses' testimonies, critical text messages, emergency alert logs, and photographic evidence that tell the real story about Impact Plastics' fatal failures," Zack Lawson, an attorney representing Alexa Peterson, Johnny Peterson's daughter, in a wrongful death lawsuit against Impact Plastics. "We're grateful that in America, juries — not bureaucrats citing unnamed sources — will decide the truth based on all the evidence." Greg Coleman, an attorney for the Mendoza and Barnett families, said in a statement from his firm that they 'vehemently disagree with any characterization that Impact Plastics exercised reasonable diligence in dismissing employees.' According to Coleman, "the facts simply do not support" a finding that the floodwaters were already too high and strong when the factory "finally, and begrudgingly, allowed workers to leave." While he agreed with a suggestion from the safety administration that the plant should improve its emergency plans, he stated that "this comes far too late for our clients." Relatives of the missing and dead factory employees, and those who survived, have alleged they were made to show up to work even as the hurricane was moving through the area. The day before the historic flood, the National Weather Service in Morristown, Tennessee, issued several warnings of potential flooding for the rest of the week. The local school district canceled school, citing weather warnings, and at least one other company in the same industrial park as Impact Plastics, Foam Products Corp., closed their doors Friday. It was the first time their Erwin plant had ever closed for extreme weather. Impact Plastics, which manufactures components for cars, helicopters, furniture and other products, decided to open that Friday, as did several other nearby businesses. Through lawyers, Impact Plastics said in a statement Wednesday that it welcomed the results of TOSHA's investigation and that the company and its founder, Gerald O'Connor, have cooperated with it. 'Impact Plastics and Gerald O'Connor continue to concentrate on seeing to the needs of members of the Impact Plastics family and grieving over the wonderful people who were lost in the flood," the company stated. "Mr. O'Connor is focused on rebuilding Impact Plastics for the benefit of the employees, the customers, and the community.' This article was originally published on

Deaths of Tennessee factory workers in Hurricane Helene flooding was 'not work-related,' state agency finds
Deaths of Tennessee factory workers in Hurricane Helene flooding was 'not work-related,' state agency finds

NBC News

time03-04-2025

  • NBC News

Deaths of Tennessee factory workers in Hurricane Helene flooding was 'not work-related,' state agency finds

Tennessee's workplace safety agency has absolved a plastics plant of responsibility in the deaths of six workers who were swept away by floodwaters from Hurricane Helene in September. The Sept. 27 deaths gained national attention when community members and relatives of the mostly Latino plant employees questioned why they hadn't been dismissed from work early enough to escape the record levels of rain that overcame the plastics factory in Erwin and take the only road out. The report from the Tennessee Occupational Safety and Health Administration (TOSHA) published Wednesday, said that because 'work operations had stopped and employees had left the building,' the deaths were not work-related and thus not within its jurisdiction. 'After considering the evidence," Chris Cannon, a spokesman with the Tennessee Department of Labor and Workforce Development, said, "TOSHA determined that company management exercised reasonable diligence in dismissing employees and providing them sufficient time to leave the facility safely.' A criminal probe by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation into the deaths is still underway, said Leslie Earhart, the bureau's spokesperson. Five employees and one contractor were killed when the semi-truck trailer they had sought refuge on was overtaken by raging floodwaters. They were Monica Hernandez-Corona, 44; Bertha Mendoza, 56; Johnny Peterson, 55; Lidia Verdugo Gastelum, 63; Rosa Maria Andrade Reynoso, 29; and Sibrina Barnett, 53. Six others were tossed from the truck bed and later rescued. Attorneys representing relatives of some of the deceased employees rejected the probe's conclusions. 'TOSHA's report ignores multiple witnesses' testimonies, critical text messages, emergency alert logs, and photographic evidence that tell the real story about Impact Plastics' fatal failures," Zack Lawson, an attorney representing Alexa Peterson, Johnny Peterson's daughter, in a wrongful death lawsuit against Impact Plastics. "We're grateful that in America, juries — not bureaucrats citing unnamed sources — will decide the truth based on all the evidence." Greg Coleman, an attorney for the Mendoza family, said they "vehemently disagree with any characterization that Impact Plastics exercised reasonable diligence in dismissing employees." The facts, he said, do not support a finding that the floodwaters were already too high and strong when the factory "finally, and begrudgingly, allowed workers to leave." While he agreed with a suggestion from the safety administration that the plant should improve its emergency plans, "this comes far too late for our clients." Relatives of the missing and dead factory employees, and those who survived, have alleged they were made to show up to work even as the hurricane was moving through the area. The day before the historic flood, the National Weather Service in Morristown, Tennessee, issued several warnings of potential flooding for the rest of the week. The local school district canceled school, citing weather warnings, and at least one other company in the same industrial park as Impact Plastics, Foam Products Corp., closed their doors Friday. It was the first time their Erwin plant had ever closed for extreme weather. Impact Plastics, which manufactures components for cars, helicopters, furniture and other products, decided to open that Friday, as did several other nearby businesses. Through lawyers, Impact Plastics said in a statement Wednesday that it welcomed the results of TOSHA's investigation and that the company and its founder, Gerald O'Connor, have cooperated with it. 'Impact Plastics and Gerald O'Connor continue to concentrate on seeing to the needs of members of the Impact Plastics family and grieving over the wonderful people who were lost in the flood," the company stated. "Mr. O'Connor is focused on rebuilding Impact Plastics for the benefit of the employees, the customers, and the community.'

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