Top News


Concussions Researcher Wins 'Genius Grant'

Among 22 winners of $500,000, no-strings-attached awards announced Sept. 20 by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation was Kevin Guskiewicz, who has focused his research on sports-related concussions.

Cause of Norwegian Cruise Ship Fire Still Unclear

The MS Nordlys, operated by Hurtigruten ASA, has been moved to a shipyard to undergo repairs after a Sept. 15 fire. The operator says four other ships equipped with the same engine are continuing their cruises.

UK Food Agency Calls for Clearer Date Labeling

The Food Standards Agency also issued guidance last week to help manufacturers remove six food colors from their products.



ASSE Urges Farmers to Work Safely

The sector's fatality rate in 2009 was 24.7 per 100,000 workers, and an average of 243 farm workers suffer lost-time injuries each day, ASSE said.

October Especially Cruel to Metal, Nonmetal Mines

A Fatal Alert posted by MSHA says this category of mines has experienced more fatalities in October than in any other month during the past 11 years.

OSHA Nails Three Marine Corps Contractors for Crane, Trenching Hazards

OSHA cited the contractors for safety hazards after a worker received burns from an electrical shock during the installation of a new landfill gas processing and compression facility at the U.S. Marine Corps Logistic Base in Albany, Ga.

Tyco Splitting Fire and Security Businesses

The board has voted to divide into three independent businesses. One will be a commercial fire and security company with about $10 billion in annual revenue and 69,000 employees.

Good Start for NEBOSH's International Outreach

Sixteen of the 17 people who took its first Health and Safety at Work exam given in Arabic achieved the qualification. Next up: Russian and Mandarin.

HUD Funds 39 Local Lead Abatement Projects

The agency announced its $93 million will clean up lead and other health hazards in nearly 7,000 high-risk homes and train workers about lead safety methods.

Chronic Diseases are World's Leading Killer, WHO Says

In the United States, 87 percent of all deaths are due to noncommunicable diseases. Sixteen percent of the population smokes and 43 percent are physically inactive.

Bank of America to Pay $930,000 to Worker Following Whistleblower Investigation

The employee led internal investigations that revealed widespread and pervasive wire, mail, and bank fraud involving Countrywide employees.

Aetna Expands Ohio Network

The network includes 289 hospitals and 33,530 primary care and specialist physicians to serve about 1.1 million Aetna members in the state.

Florida Insurer Phasing in Sinkhole Increases

Representatives of Citizens Property Insurance Corporation defended the large increases during a Sept. 13 public hearing, saying claims and the cost of adjusting sinkhole losses are skyrocketing.

Oregon OSHA Plans Confined Space Changes

Two public hearings are set for Sept. 30 and Oct. 7 on its proposed rule that would include the construction industry in its scope.

NTSB Investigating Reno Race Crash, Nine Dead

Nine people, including stunt pilot Jimmy Leeward, were reported killed and more than 50 others were hurt when a WWII-era plane crashed during a race.

Explosion Hazards Lead to ExxonMobil's $126,600 Fine

The serious violations involve failing to investigate incidents as being related to process safety management and address inconsistent thickness measurements collected during pressure vessel inspections.

Third-Party Audits Proposed for Offshore Operations

BOEMRE has decided independent audits are needed, plus procedures authorizing any employee to stop work upon seeing a regulated activity that endangers a person, property, or the environment.

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