Denver, CO —
OSHA Injury Report: BAND-IT-IDEX
Injury · Job transfer or restriction
At a glance
On , an injury at BAND-IT-IDEX in Denver, CO 80216 resulted in job transfer or restriction. Employee was eMI Operator in hose clamps, metal, manufacturing.
Where did this happen?
- Establishment
- BAND-IT-IDEX
- Parent company
- BAND-IT-IDEX
- Street
- 4799 Dahlia Street
- City
- Denver
- State
- CO
- ZIP
- 80216
- On-site location
- Maintenance Department
What was the outcome?
- Outcome
- Job transfer or restriction (code 3)
- Type
- Injury (code 1)
- Days restricted or transferred
- 3
Before the incident
Moving empty drum of acid from EMI cell to maintenance department.
What happened
The team member grabbed the outside rim of the tank to move the bin and carried it to maintenance. After placing the tank the team member noticed some discoloration and burning in their fingers. There was acid on the outside rim of the tank from dumping the tank that they did not notice. The team member was not using acid resistant gloves however they were not currently required during this task of moving the acid tank. The gloves are required during the changing or addition of the acid but not moving the acid tank.
Injury or illness
Chemical burns
Object or substance involved
Nitric acid.
Summary line
Employee contacted nitric acid on top of empty drum. The employees gloves were soaked with the acid and the employee continued to wear the gloves. After some time noticed pain and discoloration in fingers.
Employee and industry
- Job description
- EMI Operator
- SOC code
- 9999 — Uncoded
- NAICS code
- 332722 — Hose clamps, metal, manufacturing
- NAICS vintage
- 2022
- Avg employees
- 165
- Total hours worked
- 316594
- Establishment ID
- 45365
- Employer case #
- 6
When (timing detail)
- Date of incident
- Shift started
- 6:00:00.000
- Time of incident
- 11:00:00.000
- Submitted
- 05FEB24:19:12:00
Source
Data from OSHA ITA Form 300/301 electronic submissions, filing year unspecified. ITA Case Detail records are establishment-reported submissions, not OSHA inspections — no per-record IMIS deep link exists.