Employees were exposed corrosive materials and a leaking hot water tank.
The program's vision is "to ensure the safety and well-being of construction workers, motorists, truck drivers, pedestrians and their families by making transportation project sites worldwide zero-incident zones."
Twenty years of research inside the L Building has brought about a Ladder Safety App and advancements in respiratory protection and identifying lung disease.
The agency has offered assistance on the safety and health hazards that present themselves this time of year.
Foodles Production company has been fined for the incident.
This is the sixth time the roofing contractor has been cited for exposing workers to fall hazards, according to OSHA, which issued $101,121 in penalties for the safety violations to Home Live Roofing LLC.
The money is part of the New Community Safety Grant Program.
The company has been placed in OSHA’s Severe Violator Enforcement Program.
The awards are presented to individuals and organizations that help advance safety at work, in homes and communities.
If the physician decides to replace an affected device based on a patient's circumstances, St. Jude Medical will provide a replacement device at no cost; the company's statement said that none of its pacemakers are affected by this advisory because they are powered by low-voltage batteries.
The charter has been renewed for two years.
The agency says some still face a serious flooding threat.
Participants are encouraged to develop a key message or slogan, use humor, and get creative while emphasizing ways to protect themselves and their co-workers from being hurt on the job.
According to the governor's office, opioid overdose deaths are now the leading cause of accidental deaths in nearly every part of Washington state, surpassing motor vehicle deaths and firearm-related deaths, and 718 people died from opioid overdoses in Washington last year.
"National Safe Work Month has been running for over a decade, and during this time there has been a steady decline in the number of workers injured or killed at work. However, each year almost 200 people are still heading off to work and not returning home. We can do better than this," CEO Michelle Baxter says.
Allstate Can Corp. has been fined $104K after workers suffered injuries, including amputations.
An investigation into an accident led to the decision.