KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) – A federal agency has recommended nearly $200,000 in fines after an apprentice technician died from electrocution at a construction site in Kansas City last year – just a year after another technician working for the company was electrocuted at a construction site in Kansas.
The technician working for U.S. Engineering Services died on Aug. 24, 2022, when he came in contact with energized parts while clearing a chiller unit at University Academy in Kansas City, Missouri, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration said Tuesday.
An OSHA investigation found the company did not follow required procedures that could have prevented the death. The agency cited similar violations when another company HVAC technician was electrocuted while working on a rooftop air conditioning unit in Wichita, Kansas, in July 2021.
OSHA cited U.S. Engineering Services, a subsidiary of U.S. Engineering, for three serious and two repeat violations and proposed $197,642 in penalties. The agency found similar violations after the worker died in Wichita. U.S. Engineering Services paid the penalties in that case.
The company has 15 business days to respond to OSHA’S recommendations. A spokesperson for U.S. Enterprises did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Tuesday.
Topics Workers' Compensation Missouri
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.

Electric Bills in Coal Country West Virginia Now Top Mortgage Payments
Here’s a List of Gulf Energy Infrastructure Damaged in Iran War
Verisk: Insurance Claims Volume Fell to 5-Year Low in 2025
Wildfires Race Across US as Drought Spans Half the Nation 

