WASHINGTON, D.C. �The Department of Transportation�s Federal
Aviation Administration (FAA) proposes seven civil penalties totaling $455,000
against DHL Express (USA), Inc., of Plantation, Fla., for allegedly violating
Hazardous Materials Regulations.
In each case, the FAA alleges the company accepted shipments that were not
properly prepared for air transportation, and failed to ensure its employees or
agents received required hazardous materials training.
All the shipments were discovered during inspections at the DHL Express
package sorting facility in Erlanger, Ky. The proposed civil penalties are
$65,000 for each case. The allegations are as follows:
Dec. 13, 2013: DHL accepted a box containing printing ink, a flammable
liquid, for shipment on an ABX Air cargo flight from Memphis, Tenn., to LeLude,
France. The shipment was not accompanied by a dangerous goods declaration, the
FAA alleges.
March 24, 2014: DHL accepted a box containing a one-liter can of paint, a
flammable liquid, for shipment on an Atlas Air flight from Roswell, Ga., to
Victoria, Australia. The shipment was not accompanied by a dangerous goods
declaration, the FAA alleges.
April 25, 2014: DHL accepted a box containing fuel control assembly, which is
classified as a dangerous good in machinery or apparatus, for shipment on an ABX
Air cargo flight from Pompano Beach, Fla., to Rzeszow, Poland. The box had
partially obscured orientation arrows and a proper shipping name.
Aug. 13, 2014: DHL accepted a box containing a fuel/defuel cart, with a
corrosive battery installed, for shipment on a cargo flight from a U.S. Army
Warehouse in Poway, Calif., to Bagram, Afghanistan. The FAA alleges that the
corrosive battery was not disconnected from its source and the shipment was not
accompanied by a dangerous goods declaration.
Aug. 14, 2014: DHL accepted a box containing an airbag module for shipment on
an ABX Air cargo flight from Tijuana, Mexico, to Midlothian, Va. The shipment
was not accompanied by a dangerous goods declaration, the FAA alleges.
Sept. 15, 2014: DHL accepted a box containing two boxes of lithium ion
batteries for shipment on an Atlas Air cargo flight from Hopkinton, Mass., to
Hong Kong. The FAA alleges that the shipment was not properly labeled.
Sept. 18, 2014: DHL accepted a box containing an airbag module on an ABX Air
cargo flight from St. James, N.Y. to Jung-Ku, Republic of Korea. The shipment
was not accompanied by a dangerous goods declaration, the FAA alleges.
DHL has asked to meet with the FAA to discuss the cases.
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