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No Funding for MSHA Dust Rule in Appropriations Bill

A subcommittee of the House Appropriations Committee is scheduled to consider the FY2013 funding bill July 18. Rep. Hal Rogers, who chairs the committee, represents the heart of Kentucky's coal region.

FDNY Tests Take a New Look at Fires

The tests earlier this month took place in 20 wood-frame, brick-exterior townhouses built in the 1980s that were scheduled to be demolished.

Thirteen Projects Funded for Natural Gas-Fueled Vehicles

The Department of Energy is providing $30 million to them for projects such as an at-home natural gas refueling system.



Many Caregiver Agencies Fall Short, Study Finds

Only 55 percent of the surveyed agencies did a federal background check, and only one-third of them conduct drug testing of their employees, a Northwestern Medicine study found.

Extreme Heat Prompts Safety Advisory on Track-Buckling

The new advisory cites "unusually high, and prolonged, record-breaking temperatures" and highlights a recent series of derailments thought to have been caused by buckling.

CSB Releases New Five-Year Plan

The plan includes a Most Wanted Program, similar to NTSB's list.

API Defends Pipeline Industry After Enbridge Report

The industry group's pipeline director, Peter Lidiak, said initiatives are under way to improve recognition of large pipeline ruptures and responses to them.

Physical Activity Series Timed to Olympics' Opening

A July 18 symposium at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine will launch The Lancet's series examining the global impact of physical inactivity on non-communicable diseases.

Food Genome Database Planned

FDA, CDC, Agilent Technologies, and the University of California, Davis are collaborating on the 100K Genome Project to build a free, public database of 100,000 foodborne pathogen genomes, enabling faster pinpointing of illness outbreaks.

Trenching Citations Carry $122,400 in Proposed Penalties

OSHA said its investigation was triggered by a whistleblower's complaint.

ECCU 2012 Enticing Facebook Fans

Through July 20, those who Like the conference's page have a chance to win free registration for the Sept. 11-15 event.

Emergency Order Helps Tennessee Hay Haulers

Gov. Bill Haslam has issued an executive order allowing them to move heavier and larger loads for the next 60 days, because of the drought situation.

BP Settles Most Texas City PSM Citations

The $13 million settlement involves 409 of 439 willful violations of the process safety management standard OSHA filed against BP Products North America Inc. in October 2009.

Substance Abuse Care Shortage Predicted

Leaders of HHS should bring national attention to the need for building a workforce of sufficient size, the committee that wrote the new Institute of Medicine report recommended.

OR-OSHA Offers Heat Tips to Employers

When temperatures climb into the 90s or higher, workers can be at risk, and employers should recognize the symptoms to prevent serious problems, the agency says.

Lump Sum Comp Settlements Helpful, Study Shows

The Workers Compensation Research Institute released its "Return to Work after a Lump-Sum Settlement" study July 11.

Britain's OSHA Shifting to Loser-Pays Status

On Oct. 1, the Health and Safety Executive will start its cost recovery scheme, with violators paying its costs, pending Parliamentary approval.

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