An investigation determined seven workers were at risk in February and March of 2016 at a Pittsburgh facility.
OSHA & ANSI Inspections have different regulations. Do you know if you are compliant? Let’s examine each set of standards to fully understand the differences.
The winner of the annual statewide contest was recognized Aug. 6 at the Ohio State Fair for her tornado safety poster.
When you schedule your fall protection site survey, you are taking a very important step towards a safe workplace.
A new study says the risk increased beyond 45 hours per week over the course of a decade or longer.
The goals of this rooftop safety audit are to ensure that the high risk areas are inspected, and that risks are reduced to you and your employees that access the roof.
DG Macpherson will become CEO and a member of the board effective Oct. 1, 2016. Macpherson is now chief operating officer and will become the fifth CEO in the company's history.
"We're hopeful that the information contained in the voyage data recorder will provide insights into the circumstances of the ship's sinking," said Brian Curtis, acting director of the NTSB Office of Marine Safety.
Developmental controllers are trained to control and separate live air traffic within designated airspace at and around an air traffic control tower, radar approach control facility, or air route traffic control center. New ATCs get their initial training at the FAA Academy in Oklahoma City.
A new type of fuel cell, increasing an electric motor's output via 3D printing, lithium-air batteries, and changing the shape of an aircraft's wing in flight are among five aviation-related new technologies that personnel involved in NASA's Convergent Aeronautics Solutions project will be studying.
The agency is commissioning a study to assess the feasibility of designing a computer-assisted phone survey.
The worker was crushed by a 4,000-pound machine part, according to OSHA.
The Hear and Now campaign challenges entrepreneurs to develop a solution to noise exposure and hearing loss.
Five years ago, on Aug. 13, 2011, stage rigging collapsed as storms approached the Indianapolis fairgrounds, killing seven people. The Indiana Supreme Court ruled in a key liability case stemming from the collapse earlier this year.
Nuclear waste disposal activities at the facility have been delayed about nine months and cost about $64 million more than expected because the agency did not follow best practices in developing those estimates, a new report says.