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At a Texas Foundry, an Indifference to Life

January 8, 2003
By DAVID BARSTOW and LOWELL BERGMAN




! Additional reporting by James Sandler and Robin Stein.

TYLER, Tex. - It is said that only the desperate seek work
at Tyler Pipe, a sprawling, rusting pipe foundry out on
Route 69, just past the flea market. Behind a high metal
fence lies a workplace that is part Dickens and part
Darwin, a dim, dirty, hellishly hot place where men are
regularly disfigured by amputations and burns, where
turnover is so high that convicts are recruited from local
prisons, where some workers urinate in their pants because
their bosses refuse to let them step away from the
manufacturing line for even a few moments.

Rolan Hoskin was from the ranks of the desperate. His life
was a tailspin of unemployment, debt and divorce. A master
electrician, 48 years old, he had retreated to a low-rent
apartment on the outskirts of town and taken an entry-level
maintenance job on the graveyard shift at Tyler Pipe.

He would come home covered in fine black soot, utterly
drained and dreading the next shift. "I don't know if I'm
going to last another week," his twin brother recalls him
saying. The job scared him; he didn't know what he was
doing. But the pay was decent, almost $10 an hour, and his
electricity was close to being cut off. "He was just trying
to make it," his daughter said.

On June 29, 2000, in his second month on the job, Mr.
Hoskin descended into a deep pit under a huge molding
machine and set to work on an aging, balky conveyor belt
that carried sand. Federal rules require safety guards on
conveyor belts to prevent workers from getting caught and
crushed. They also require belts to be shut down when
maintenance is done on them.

But this belt was not shut down, federal records show. Nor
was it protected by metal safety guards. That very night,
Mr. Hoskin had been trained to adjust the belt while it was
still running. Less downtime that way, the men said. Now it
was about 4 a.m., and Mr. Hoskin was alone in the cramped,
dark pit. The din was deafening, the footing treacherous
under heavy drifts of black sand.

He was found on his knees. His left arm had been crushed
first, the skin torn off. His head had been pulled between
belt and rollers. His skull had split. "If he fought that
machine I know his last thought was me," said his daughter,
April Hoskin-Silva, her dark eyes rimmed with tears.

It was not just a conveyor belt that claimed Mr. Hoskin's
life that warm summer night. He also fell victim to a way
of doing business that has produced vast profits and, as
the plant's owners have admitted in federal court,
deliberate indifference to the safety of workers at Tyler
Pipe.

Mr. Hoskin worked for McWane Inc., a privately held company
based in Birmingham, Ala., that owns Tyler Pipe and is one
of the world's largest manufacturers of cast-iron sewer and
water pipe. It is also one of the most dangerous employers
in America, according to a nine-month examination by The
New York Times, the PBS television program "Frontline" and
the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation.

Since 1995, at least 4,600 injuries have been recorded in
McWane foundries, many hundreds of them serious ones,
company documents show. Nine workers, including Mr. Hoskin,
have been killed. McWane plants, which employ about 5,000
workers, have been cited for more than 400 federal health
and safety violations, far more than their six major
competitors combined.

No McWane executive would be interviewed on the record. But
in a series of written responses, the company's president,
G. Ruffner Page, acknowledged "serious mistakes" and
expressed deep regret for Mr. Hoskin's death. "Our
intensified focus on safety speaks to lessons learned," he
wrote. At the same time, he sought to explain and strongly
defend the company's business methods.

"Over the years, McWane has grown by the acquisition of
troubled companies that had become uncompetitive," he
wrote. "Through substantial investment in new plant and
equipment and more disciplined management practices, McWane
transformed these underperforming companies into efficient
and viable operations." Disciplined management, he said,
has allowed McWane to stave off foreign competitors who
have no regard for safety.

In the last decade, many American corporations have
embraced such a vision of capitalism - cutting costs,
laying off workers and pressing those who remain to labor
harder, longer and more efficiently. But top federal and
state regulators say McWane has taken this idea to the
extreme. Describing the company's business, they use the
words "lawless" and "rogue."

The company's managers call it "the McWane way."

The
story of Tyler Pipe, drawn from company and government
documents and interviews with dozens of current and former
workers and managers, is a case study in the application of
the McWane way. It is the anatomy of a workplace where,
federal officials and employees say, nearly everything -
safety programs, environmental controls, even the smallest
federally mandated precautions that might have kept Rolan
Hoskin alive - has been subordinated to production, to the
commandment to keep the pipe rolling off the line.

Federal safety inspectors tried to make a difference. They
cited and fined and cajoled. But for years, records show,
little changed.

"You put people at risk," a former senior plant manager at
Tyler Pipe said. "We did every day."

Which is why even now the toughest of Tyler Pipe veterans
remember the day McWane came to town as the day they were,
as one of them put it, "kicked into hell."

Introducing `the McWane Way'


Tyler, a city of 85,000 an
hour and a half's drive east of Dallas, began as a
stagecoach town, but it came of age around two precious
commodities, East Texas crude and some of the finest roses
on earth. Oil and roses still help define Tyler, or at
least a certain conjured Tyler. The municipal rose garden
alone has 38,000 bushes, and the old oil families still
carry clout.

But by the early 90's, the shuttered storefronts down by
the county courthouse explained why local leaders were so
endlessly worried about the care and nurturing of Tyler's
contemporary crown jewels - the Kelly-Springfield tire
plant, two air-conditioner factories and Tyler Pipe.

These big manufacturers, they knew, represented something
extremely valuable and increasingly rare: places where
someone with a high school diploma and a strong back could
make $15 an hour, where a Mexican immigrant with little
English could firmly grasp the next rung.

The pipe foundry occupies several hundred acres northwest
of downtown. Its smokestacks rise high above a north and
south plant, each with its own cupola, a multistory furnace
that melts tons of scrap metal to produce smoky white
rivers of molten iron. The molten iron is poured into
spinning cylinders to form pipes, into molds of packed
black sand to make fittings.

The company would not let a reporter tour the plant. But
employees describe simply stepping inside as an
overwhelming experience. First is the heat, wave upon wave
of it, sometimes in excess of 130 degrees. Then there is
the noise - of pipe slamming into pipe, of pneumatic tools
that grind and cut, of massive machines that shudder and
shake, of honking forklifts and roaring exhaust systems.
Dust and fumes choke the lungs and coat the lights, leaving
the plant floor a spectral labyrinth of glowing pipes and
blackened machinery.

In the early 90's, Tyler Pipe employed about 2,800 people
and did about $200 million in business a year. It was
modestly profitable, and the owners, the Tyler Corporation,
were conventionally paternalistic. They distributed turkeys
at Christmas and door prizes at the annual employee
barbecue. Regulators said the plant, while far from
perfect, made an effort to comply with safety and
environmental rules.

In late 1995, the Tyler Corporation sold the foundry to
McWane. In one stroke, McWane had bought one of its main
rivals and acquired its largest plant.

Within weeks, senior executives flew in from Birmingham and
set about executing a plan of stunning audacity: Over the
next two years, they cut nearly two-thirds of the
employees, yet insisted that production continue apace.
They eliminated quality control inspectors and safety
inspectors, pollution control personnel and relief workers,
cleaning crews and maintenance workers.

"It got pretty bad," recalled Kevin Fowler, the human
resources manager from 1996 to 1999. "If I walked into a
department people would wonder if I was coming with their
termination."

Alarmed by the layoffs, city leaders sought meetings with
McWane executives. Their requests were rebuffed. "They just
disassociated themselves from the city," Thomas G. Mullins,
the chamber of commerce president, recalled.

To keep up production, McWane eliminated one of three
shifts; instead of three shifts of eight hours, there were
two 12-hour shifts. At the end of a shift, supervisors
often marched through yelling, "Four more hours!" So
employees worked 16-hour days, sometimes seven days a week.


Men who operated one machine were ordered to operate three.
Breaks were allowed only if a relief worker was available,
but McWane had reduced the number of relief workers and
forbade supervisors to fill in for hourly workers. The
policy hit hardest near iron-pouring stations, where
workers had to drink plenty of fluids to withstand the
heat. The humiliating result, six workers said in separate
interviews, was that men were sometimes forced to urinate
in their pants or risk heat exhaustion.

Even the most basic amenities did not survive. The
barbecues and 401(k) plan were easy enough targets. But
items like soap, medicated skin cream and hand towels were
eliminated from the plant stockroom as unnecessary
"luxuries," company records show. If they were available at
all, they had to be specially ordered with approval from
top managers.

Several workers said they were told by their bosses to
bring their own toilet tissue. Near the cupola, managers
rationed crushed ice for the workers' drinks, company
records show. Out by the loading docks, they eliminated
portable heaters used by forklift drivers to warm up in
winter. "We do not provide comfort heat for individual
employees," Dick Stoker, the works manager, explained in a
memorandum.

Restrictions were placed on safety equipment. Protective
aprons, safety boots and face shields were no longer
stocked and readily available. Heavy, heat-resistant $17
gloves were replaced by $2 cloth ones. As a result, workers
wrapped their hands in duct tape to protect from burns.

The union was helpless to resist, past and current leaders
agree. Organized labor had never been a potent force at
Tyler Pipe, and the layoffs devastated the union's
membership. The contract barred strikes, permitted 16-hour
days and let breaks be canceled.

"My hands was tied," said Bobby Hopson, former president of
Local 1157 of the United Steelworkers of America.

Morale plummeted, but profits soared. Senior managers say
they were told that Tyler Pipe earned more than $50 million
in 1996 - double the reported profits for the five-year
period before McWane arrived.

Four years after the takeover, inspectors from the federal
Occupational Safety and Health Administration spent several
days taking the measure of the new regime. They found more
than 150 safety hazards. They found poorly maintained
equipment. They found a work force that was poorly trained,
ill equipped, overworked.

"Throughout the plant, molten metal is seen spilling from
the cupolas, bulls and ladles," their report said. "The
forklift trucks transport the metal, and the ground behind
the trucks often smokes with puddles of molten metal.
Workers are covered with black residue from the foundry
sand. Many work areas are dark, due to poor lighting and
clouds of sand. Despite all the ignition and fuel sources,
exit paths are not obvious. Many workers have scars or
disfigurations which are noticeable from several feet away.
Burns and amputations are frequent.

"This facility is located in a relatively small town where
jobs are not plentiful. Throughout the plant, in
supervisors' offices and on bulletin boards, next to
production charts and union memos, is posted in big orange
letters: REDUCE MAN HOURS PER TON."

Talking Safety, Walking Danger


Any foundry is filled
with dangers seen and unseen. For three of the last four
years, the cast-iron foundry industry has recorded the
nation's highest injury rates. But the inspectors said they
were drawn to Tyler Pipe because its rate was so much
higher than the industry average, records show. Even with
far fewer workers at Tyler in 1996 than in 1995, more
workdays were lost because of injuries, records show.

On paper, the company emphasized safety. "You are expected
to work efficiently and as quickly as possible without
compromising safety rules or safe practices in any way,"
the employee handbook states.

But inspectors and workers alike called the safety program
a charade. "In essence, they are doing it in `form' but not
with substance," the inspectors wrote.

The company prepared extensive written safety rules. But
even the most senior supervisors let employees work in
clear violation of those rules, the inspectors found. And
while the company promised twice-a-week safety inspections,
the same hazards showed up week after week.

Ultimately, the inspectors wrote, it came down to
incentives: "They have never developed a mechanism to hold
supervisors accountable for safety while, on the other
hand, they have mastered a system for holding supervisors
accountable for production downtime."

Shutting down machines, taking special precautions before
entering dangerous pits, putting safety guards on, taking
them off - all these safety measures "lengthened the
`downtime' taking away from production activities," OSHA
inspectors wrote.

It was Elena Glasscock's job to make sure supervisors gave
their workers proper safety training. But many supervisors
were simply overwhelmed by production demands, she said.
What little training they did offer was lost on Tyler
Pipe's many Hispanic workers who spoke little English.

"I would ask the supervisor, if this person could not speak
English, how did he know what the work instruction said?"
she recalled. Last summer, after 28 years at Tyler Pipe,
she resigned in disgust.

Experienced workers left in droves. Many were fired under a
new "no fault" attendance policy that assessed points for
each sick day and half points for arriving late or leaving
early. Ten points resulted in dismissal. Others quit
because of sudden demotions and pay cuts. Mr. Fowler, the
personnel director, said he quit because he tired of being
seen as a "monster."

New employees are called "pumpkin heads" because of the
orange hard hats they must wear, and each week waves of
pumpkin heads arrived. But it was not until pumpkin heads
started showing up with electronic monitoring bracelets
that people realized the company was recruiting at Texas
prisons. Many of the newly released prisoners did not last.
They worked up to 16 hours a day, sometimes for 14 days
straight, then were fired or quit before they qualified for
benefits or union protection.

According to interviews and company documents, turnover at
times approached 100 percent. Many rookie employees got
hurt and left. It was a vicious cycle: injuries fueled
turnover; turnover fueled injuries.

The plant was filled with workers who barely knew their way
around, let alone grasped the dangers they faced. In April
1996, a crew of outside contract workers was sent up onto
the roof to clean gutters. One worker, Juan Jimenez,
stepped through a skylight and plunged 55 feet to his
death. Mr. Page said that Tyler Pipe's safety director had
pointed out the skylight to Mr. Jimenez, but OSHA
inspectors said the death "could have been avoided" if the
skylight had safety rails as required under OSHA rules.

In interviews, dozens of workers said the unrelenting
pressure to make production quotas resulted in dangerous
shortcuts. Bobby Hopson's younger brother, Jerry, a
54-year-old father of two, took a shortcut in May 1996. His
maintenance crew had finished work on a production line
and, hurrying to get out of the way, cut through a molding
machine. The line started up, and Jerry Hopson was crushed
by a hydraulic piston. A year later, after more than 20
operations, he died.

"He was just a swell feller," his brother, the former union
president, said, brushing back tears. In the local paper, a
plant executive had called Jerry Hopson "a good man who
made a very big mistake." But Bobby Hopson insisted that
senior supervisors were well aware of the shortcut and its
hazards, yet made no effort to stop its use.

"If you lose a minute, you've already lost, you know, maybe
a fitting or two," he said.

Losing Limbs but Not Pipes


On Jan. 22, 1997, another maintenance worker, Ira Cofer,
descended alone into a machine pit. "Downsizing had ended
the earlier practice of entering the pits with a buddy,"
OSHA investigators later wrote. When Mr. Cofer's sleeve
snagged in an unguarded conveyor belt, he struggled
desperately to free himself. It was nearly three hours
before his screams were heard.

"Eyewitnesses said that the friction of the belt had sanded
his arm away, so that even his elbow joint was worn smooth
and flat," investigators wrote.

Mr. Cofer's arm had to be amputated.

"I was mad for a
while, then I was praying," he said of the ordeal. "There
was nothing there but the Lord."

In their accident report, plant managers put the blame
squarely on Mr. Cofer: "Keep hand away from belt and do not
work alone," they wrote.

Within months, four more maintenance workers suffered
amputation injuries at Tyler Pipe. In 1999, OSHA cited the
plant for 31 instances of inadequate guarding on machines.
By 2000, according to OSHA, 60 percent of the north plant's
70 maintenance workers had been hurt.

Senior managers knew all this, OSHA records show. They knew
that guards were frequently left off for weeks at a time.
They knew that maintenance mechanics were working on
running conveyor belts, entering treacherous machine pits
alone.

And so in June 2000, Rolan Hoskin, afraid of the job but
too desperate for work to quit, took his turn in the pit.

His death prompted Mr. Stoker, the works manager, to issue
a memorandum. "WE WILL NOT PUT PRODUCTION AHEAD OF SAFETY,"
he wrote. "If that means that we lose a couple of pieces of
pipe or fittings to do the job in a safe manner, so be it.
Then we need to figure out how to recover the lost
production safely."

But in a memorandum dated Aug. 2, an engineering manager
raised serious concerns about safety. He called for a
potentially costly program to build new safety guards. "We
are not in compliance on most if not all our belt
conveyors," he warned.

In response, he received a dismissive letter from the human
resources manager.

Burn the Tires, Scrub the Toilet


McWane's senior executives, including C. Phillip McWane,
the chairman and chief executive, received regular reports
from all their plants. The reports measured seemingly
everything - injuries, lost work hours, dismissals,
operating margins. By 2000, it was clear that Tyler Pipe
had become an exceedingly profitable enterprise.

It was also clear that something was very wrong. Red flags
were everywhere.

There had been three deaths since the takeover. The injury
rate was climbing, the company's own reports showed.
"Safety is without a doubt one of our worst areas," Mr.
Stoker wrote in a confidential memorandum to top
supervisors. "I have failed in this area, but I can promise
you that we will not fail to improve in this area come
2001."

Meanwhile, the plant had been deemed an "E.P.A. High
Priority Violator," and company lawyers were recommending
steps to forestall a criminal inquiry of its environmental
record, company records show.

After the takeover, Tyler Pipe's environmental department
was virtually wiped out, several current and former
employees said. One former senior manager said that when he
arrived in 2000, he found an environmental program "in the
Dark Ages."

"It was not humanly possible for one person to handle all
of the environmental issues at a plant of that size," he
recalled.

In March of that year, state environmental investigators
spent several days at Tyler Pipe. They found that the plant
had failed to keep inspections records, to get required
permits and to maintain pollution controls and wastewater
treatment lagoons. The list ran on and on.

Now, with federal regulators lurking, Mr. Stoker told his
staff, "We are so far out of compliance at Tyler Pipe that
I cannot begin to cover our needs in this letter."

Even so, in a January 2001 memorandum, senior McWane
executives outlined an environmental upgrade at Tyler Pipe
and several other plants that was relatively low cost -
outside audits, better training, improved manuals, an
annual company environmental conference.

Before long, the company's stated desire for "environmental
excellence" was tested in a small way. The question was
what to do with a pile of 200 old tires. It would have cost
about $750 to have them hauled away to a hazardous waste
dump. But company documents show that Mr. Stoker had
another solution, even though he had been told that it
violated state air-quality laws.

"He wanted the tires burned and he wanted them burned now,"
an internal company document stated. And so they were, in
the cupola. Buckets of contaminated grease disappeared the
same way, workers said.

The biggest worries, though, had to do with safety. Texas
workers' compensation laws give McWane broad immunity from
negligence lawsuits. But they also required it to pay
medical bills and lost wages for injured workers. Company
executives complained that they were "hemorrhaging" money
on workers' compensation - many millions of dollars a year
and rising.

Once again, the company chose a minimalist approach,
according to company and OSHA records and former safety and
health employees. It devised a system of "workers'
compensation cost control techniques" that shifted
responsibility for safety problems onto the workers
themselves.

It was a system that assumed widespread fraud and often
subjected workers reporting injuries to disciplinary
action, and sometimes firing, for violating safety rules.

"Whether the employee is 100 percent or 5 percent at fault
is irrelevant," wrote Stephen A. Smith, then president of
the McWane subsidiary that owns Tyler Pipe.

In 2000 and 2001, company records show, more than 350
workers were subjected to disciplinary actions - known as
D.A.'s - after reporting injuries. "All disciplines short
of termination is administered with the intent and purpose
to teach," the plant's employee handbook explained.

But OSHA inspectors concluded that the system was used not
to teach but to punish. Disciplinary action was meted out
if it was the fault of the employee or not, they said.

"The true significance of a D.A. is that they move an
employee along a track for termination," the inspectors
wrote. Even longtime employees with exemplary work records
could be fired for a single D.A. Employees say they learned
to keep injuries a secret whenever possible.

In his response, the McWane president, Mr. Page, said no
Tyler Pipe worker had been fired in retaliation for
reporting an injury. He said managers were encouraged to
enforce safety rules "so that there would be no doubt about
management's commitment to the safety program." He added,
"No judge or jury has ever concluded that Tyler Pipe acted
improperly."

As many companies do, McWane insists that injured workers
return to work as soon as possible on "modified duty." Mr.
Page described modified duty as a beneficial program that
speeded recovery. At Tyler Pipe, though, records and
interviews show that modified duty often meant humiliating
and punitive jobs like cleaning toilets.

John T. Combs was the senior manager who oversaw modified
duty. In an internal company e-mail message, he extolled
the benefits of assigning injured workers to toilet duty
and described how he assigned "an aggressive, physically
imposing supervisor" to oversee them. "This accomplished
one of two things," he wrote. "1) the employees would
return to work because cleaning toilets is not fun and it
paid less than their regular job or 2) they would quit."

Mr. Combs did not respond to telephone messages.

Around
town, Tyler Pipe was approaching pariah status. "You know
what the saying in the community is?" a county commissioner
asked at a commission meeting in 2001. "That if you can't
work anywhere else, go to work at Tyler Pipe." With a work
force that had crept up to about 1,200, company records
showed there were more than 900 new hires in 2001.

That December, a group of employees composed an unsigned
letter to Mr. Page. It began: "On behalf of the employees
of Tyler Pipe Company . . . Please Help!"

`We Do Not Send Flowers'


Michelle Sankowsky, a nurse,
was hired in January 2002 as Tyler Pipe's occupational
health and compensation manager. It was a new position,
overseeing all workers' compensation cases. She met daily
with Boyd T. Collier III, the human resources manager, and
other senior executives. She quit after four months, she
said, because she concluded that the company routinely
targeted injured workers for dismissal.

"You've got to understand," she said. "The mentality is
that if it weren't for people looking for a free ride,
looking for the paid vacations, if it wasn't for the
malingerers, if it wasn't for the fakers, if it wasn't for
people being careless and reckless, then they wouldn't have
the numbers."

Ms. Sankowsky said she suggested a variety of low-cost
ideas to reduce rampant ergonomic complaints. She proposed
conducting warm-up exercises and wrapping brush handles in
foam. "Not cost effective," she says she was told.

In Texas, injured workers have the right to choose their
own doctors. At Tyler Pipe, this right came with an
important qualification. "We require every employee injured
at work to see the company-approved physician if a doctor
is necessary," the employee handbook says. "NO EXCEPTIONS!"
The labor contract said the same. In a memorandum to all
workers, Mr. Collier said he wanted injured workers to see
the company doctor first to "ensure the very best care in
Smith County for our employees."

Ms. Sankowsky sees it differently. "It all boiled down to
that they wanted to be in control," she said. Controlling
the care, she said, was viewed as the key to saving money
and reducing injury numbers reported to OSHA. And the key
to controlling the care, she said, was Occu-Safe, a tiny
medical company hired in 1999 to run the plant dispensary
and care for injured workers at its downtown clinic.

Occu-Safe was an unlikely choice for the job. Established
only months before, it had no track record and few other
clients. It was owned by Mike Adams, whose prior business
experience, court records show, included a bankrupt
air-conditioning venture. In an interview, Mr. Adams said
he won the contract by promising deep reductions in
workers' compensation claims.

Mr. Adams also shared Tyler Pipe's skepticism about injury
claims; he says he believes that up to 50 percent are
fraudulent, and that "overutilization" of doctors is a
"huge problem." At his clinic, he said, doctors are under
strict orders to avoid "hope so, think so, want so
medicine."

Tyler Pipe was by far Mr. Adams's largest client, paying
him $615,000 in 2001, records show, and Mr. Adams began
most days discussing injury cases with Mr. Collier, the
human resources manager. Occu-Safe, Ms. Sankowsky said, was
simply too small to assert unbiased medical judgment.

"One of the benefits of having Occu-Safe as your medical
provider is that people were not taken off work," she said.


Mr. Adams denies that Mr. Collier has tried to influence
medical decisions. "The day he does, I'll walk away," he
said.

Still, records suggest that Occu-Safe was responsive to Mr.
Collier. When a supervisor punctured his arm late one
Friday night, emergency room doctors put him on Vicodin, a
strong painkiller, and told him to stay off work a week.
But according to internal e-mail, Mr. Collier wanted him
back right away; Occu-Safe representatives ordered him to
switch to a less potent drug and report to work on Tuesday.


Workers who insisted on seeing their own doctors were
assumed to be malingerers. It was called "jumping ship,"
and employees who did it, Ms. Sankowsky said, were targeted
for disciplinary action and termination.

Mr. Collier's hostility toward outside doctors was apparent
in an e-mail message on Feb. 19, 2002, to Ms. Sankowsky,
who had asked about sending flowers to an employee who had
had surgery for a workplace injury.

"Michelle: Typically we do not send flowers to hourly
ee's," he wrote. "And the only time we send flowers to
salaried ee's is death in the immediate family; I'd
entertain a proposal to fund flowers for cases like Brian
but we need to scope it very narrow so it didn't apply for
cases that were referred by CARPENTER and his band of
outlaws."

Mr. Collier was referring to Dr. Robert Carpenter, a
chiropractor with union ties who has treated approximately
60 injured Tyler Pipe workers over the last two years.
About 40 of them have since been fired, said Dr. Carpenter,
who has filed a defamation suit against Mr. Collier. He
said he no longer gets new patients who work at Tyler Pipe.


"If I was an injured worker, then I would think that
perhaps I might get fired if I went to see Dr. Carpenter,"
he said.

A Broken Back and a Bass Boat


Marcos Lopez crossed the Mexican border and found work at
Tyler Pipe at the age of 17. He was used to tough work, and
he saw plenty of men get hurt. But nothing on earth, he
said, prepared him for McWane.

"You reach this point that you just don't care about you,"
said Mr. Lopez, who is now 45. "And you set your mind on
work. And that's what they want. And that's how people get
hurt."

On March 2, 2002, it happened to him. He was working on
some machinery, stretching awkwardly in a tight space, when
he slipped and fell. His back slammed into metal. He heard
a snap, he said, and felt dizzying waves of pain and
nausea. In the dispensary, records show, he was pale and
weeping and showing signs of shock. He said his pain - a
"burning in the bone" - was so intense that it was a
challenge just to breathe.

Had he been sent to a hospital, had an X-ray been done, it
would have been clear that Mr. Lopez had suffered a
terrible injury, a severe compression fracture in his
spine.

But he was not sent to a hospital. "They just tell me to
sit down and wait for the safety man," he recalled. Ms.
Sankowsky, in the dispensary that day, recalls that senior
safety managers were deeply suspicious of Mr. Lopez. He had
a prior back injury, in 2000. Worse still, he had "jumped
ship" and been kept off work for months.

Then, in questioning Mr. Lopez, the managers discovered
that he had recently bought a bass boat. They found this
highly significant, Ms. Sankowsky recalls. Might he be
faking injury to get his boat paid off with disability
insurance? When she argued that shock was difficult to
fake, Ms. Sankowsky said, the safety manager brushed her
aside: "Michelle, don't you think that you could sweat and
cry a little bit if you thought you were going to get a
free boat and paid vacation?"

Mr. Lopez was sent by van to the Occu-Safe clinic where,
after a brief examination, he was given pain medicine and
sent home, records show. The clinic doctor diagnosed a back
strain and told the plant to expect Mr. Lopez back in three
days. In fact, he was getting worse. He felt a creeping
numbness in his legs and hands.

At Tyler Pipe, Ms. Sankowsky said, Mr. Collier and the
safety managers were "really circling their wagons around
Mr. Lopez, that he's a fraud, he's a fake, and, you know,
we're going to get him before he gets us." At a meeting on
March 13, the managers approved a plan to place Mr. Lopez
under surveillance, corporate records show.

The next day, on his third visit to Occu-Safe, Mr. Lopez
asked for an X-ray. It showed a "bad compression fracture,"
medical records state. Still, he was sent home. Nobody
informed him of the new findings, he said, and according to
Ms. Sankowsky, this was deliberate.

"Why do you not tell this gentleman that he's got a
compression fracture of the spine?" she said she asked an
Occu-Safe manager. "And he said to me, `Well, then he'd
know how hurt he was.' "

The clinic, she said, quietly began to explore the
possibility that Mr. Lopez had cancer that had weakened his
spine. Mr. Collier, she said, welcomed the news. "So we can
deny the claim because it's cancer?" she recalls him
asking.

Mr. Collier declined to comment.

Finally, more than three weeks after his fall, Mr. Lopez
was sent to a surgeon. "He said, `You're one hair to be
paralyzed for the rest of your life,' " Mr. Lopez recalled.
The doctor told him something else: his fracture had gotten
worse since the accident.

It is when he says this that Mr. Lopez, a proud and
reserved man, begins to weep. For months after the surgery,
he said, he could not dress himself, or pick up the soap in
the shower. "I feel destroyed," he said.

Mr. Adams would not discuss the case in detail; Mr. Lopez
has sued Occu-Safe for malpractice. But Mr. Adams insisted
that "Marcos got the care that he needed."

McWane kept Mr. Lopez under surveillance this year,
determined to prove him a malingerer. In his response, Mr.
Page said Mr. Lopez had been filmed "lifting heavy loads
into his car" - proof, he said, that Mr. Lopez has not
suffered any serious disability. A doctor for the Texas
Workers Compensation Commission, however, recently
determined that despite surgery and months of
rehabilitation, Mr. Lopez has a permanent partial
disability.

Epilogue


Last year, Tyler Pipe came under intense scrutiny from
federal investigators.

In the summer, the company pleaded guilty in federal court
to deliberately ignoring safety rules that could have saved
Mr. Hoskin's life. In the fall, McWane reached a settlement
with OSHA, admitting that it had willfully violated safety
rules a dozen times.

Tyler Pipe began publishing a safety newsletter, As the
Pipe Turns. The newsletter said many new safety guards had
been installed and hundreds of potential hazards
eliminated. Under a new incentive program, workers get
gifts if they do not "have an OSHA recordable accident that
results in discipline." One recent gift, a lunch cooler,
was branded with this slogan: "Safety Without Compromise."

But Tyler Pipe remains a dangerous place to work, company
records show. A recently completed internal safety audit
found 1,219 hazards.

http://www.nytimes.com/2003/01/08/national/08PIPE.html?ex=1043015827&ei=1&en=c5ce463cf4177fc3



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