Thurston County timber business fined $114,300 for violating child labor laws, state L&I says

Posted

An Olympia area timber business has been fined $114,300 by the state Department of Labor and Industries, the agency announced Tuesday.

L&I officials say the business allowed a teen to work in its logging operation and the teen got hurt on the job. As a result, MVR Timber Cutting was cited and fined.

The business has filed an appeal, according to L&I.

The investigation began last May when L&I received a report that a then-17-year-old worker was injured on the job, fracturing his foot as he jumped from one tree stump to another, according to a news release.

L&I expanded the investigation when it learned the teen was working as a choker-setter on the logging crew. Setting the choker means to wrap a cable around a log so it can be hauled away.



L&I then twice fined the company $56,000 for allowing the teen to work in logging operations 56 times and in an area where a hard hat is required another 56 times, according to the release.

"State regulations prohibit teens under the age of 18 from working a job where safety regulations require more extensive personal protective equipment than boots, gloves, and safety glasses," the release reads. "They also can't work in hard-hat zones."

L&I also fined the company $2,300 for violating hours-of-work regulations for minors.

© 2025 The Olympian (Olympia, Wash.). Visit www.theolympian.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.