Twice within a month, an Illinois roofing contractor — cited previously more than 20 times for violating federal workplace safety regulations — was again found exposing employees to falls as they did residential framing work on houses under construction in Savoy. Falls remain the construction industry’s leading cause of death.
Inspectors with the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration observed Elmer Miller’s employees, operating as Miller Building Systems LLC, standing, climbing and walking about the roofs, beams and top plates while framing homes without any protection from falling, sometimes at heights greater than 18 feet above the ground at the Prairie Meadows subdivision on June 26 and July 26, 2023.
Federal inspectors were met with hostility when they approached the worksite. The agency cited the company for lack of fall protection and not providing a means of egress from the roof.
OSHA currently has five other inspections with Elmer Miller that the agency opened in August, October and November 2023.
“Preventable falls remain the construction industry’s leading cause of death and injuries,” said OSHA Area Director Edward Marshall in Peoria, Illinois. “Elmer Miller’s repeated failure to follow federal workplace safety rules shows a disturbing disregard for his employee’s lives and well-being.”
In the past decade, OSHA has cited Miller and companies he operates 20 times, including repeat violations and willful violations, and assessed more than $900,000 in penalties, most of which has not been paid. Most of the violations relate to the contractor’s failures to protect workers from potentially deadly fall hazards while building roofs.
Source: OSHA
Topics Illinois Contractors
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Verisk: Insurance Claims Volume Fell to 5-Year Low in 2025
Trump Approves Disaster Requests for at Least 7 States; Others Wait
Convicted Insurance Mogul Lindberg Should Pay $1.6B Restitution to Companies
Here’s a List of Gulf Energy Infrastructure Damaged in Iran War 

