Enforcement


NHTSA July 4th Impaired Driving Prevention Planner Available

The intent of this planner is to provide users with marketing material, media tools, and marketing ideas to distribute to fit local needs and objectives while at the same time partnering with other states, communities, and organizations all across the country on this promotional program.

Report: Guns-on-Campus Bills Fail at State Level Across Nation

"Arming college students is the wrong lesson to learn from Virginia Tech," said Paul Helmke, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence.

MSHA Issues Belt Air Rule

Richard E. Stickler, acting assistant secretary of labor for mine safety and health, said the proposed rule "would include requirements for improved flame-resistant conveyor belts, fire prevention and detection in belt entries, standardized tactile signals on lifelines, and approval of the use of air from the belt entry to ventilate working sections."

CMS Requires Sprinklers in Long-Term Care Facilities

All 16,000 nursing homes in the country are covered by the rule, which contains a five-year phase-in period.

Alliance Plans Outreach to Spanish-Speaking Workers

OSHA and the Café Con Leche Health and Safety Outreach Committee have formed an alliance to focus on outreach and training for non-English speaking employees and youths.

U.S., China Sign Food Safety Progress Statement

Meeting with a Chinese minister in Annapolis, Md., the federal import safety leader, HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt, cited "strong and sustained cooperation by both nations."

FDA Warns Individuals, Firms to Stop Selling Fake Cancer 'Cures'

Warning letters have been sent to 23 U.S. companies and two foreign individuals marketing a wide range of products fraudulently claiming to prevent and cure cancer, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration.

MSHA Proposes Rule Requiring Refuge Alternative

The rule would require that underground coal mines provide refuge alternatives to protect miners when a life-threatening event makes escape impossible.



FRA Rebuffs Labor Bid to Block Employee Citations in HF Rule

The rule, published in February, also had set a July 1 deadline to have testing officers ready. Administrator Joseph Boardman, shown here, and the agency are giving railroads more time to prepare.

OSHA Fines Medical Center $110,000 for Asbestos Violations

OSHA has cited Niagara Falls Memorial Medical Center for alleged lack of employee safeguards and the improper removal and disposal of asbestos containing material in a closed section of the hospital during renovation work in December 2007. The Niagara Falls, N.Y., medical facility faces $110,000 in proposed fines.

EPA Proposes to Extend Deadline for Pesticide Labeling

You may be potentially affected by this action if you are a pesticide formulator, agrichemical dealer, an independent commercial applicator, or a custom blender.

DHS to Improve International Entry Process

"We're committed to a more welcoming environment for the roughly one million foreign travelers arriving at our ports each day," said Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff.

EPA to Clean Up Abandoned Uranium Mines on Navajo Nation

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in partnership with the Department of Energy, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Indian Health Service and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, recently finalized a five-year plan for cleaning up the legacy of abandoned uranium mining on the Navajo Nation.

Wal-Mart Agrees to Pay $250,000 to Disabled Ex-Employee

Retail giant Wal-Mart will pay $250,000 and furnish significant injunctive relief to settle a disability discrimination lawsuit filed by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the agency announced recently. EEOC had charged that Wal-Mart failed to accommodate and then fired a long-time pharmacy technician who suffered a disability resulting from a gunshot wound.

OSHA, ASSE Renew Alliance at Safety 2008

An alliance between OSHA and the American Society of Safety Engineers continues with the goal of fostering a culture of prevention for safety and health hazards at U.S. job sites.

Is FDA's Food Protection Plan on Track?

The Government Accountability Office continued June 13 to question whether the agency has the needed resources to fulfill the November 2007 plan to identify food vulnerabilities and risk.

California Farm Labor Contractor Barred for Heat Violations

The administrative order bars Merced Farm Labor Contractor from operating in the fields because of its alleged failure to comply with heat illness regulations.

OSHA Cites U.S. Army Base in Alaska, Again

"It is particularly disturbing that we found a number of serious violations of a repeated nature. . . . This situation does not indicate an effective program is in place," said Richard S. Terrill, regional administrator for OSHA in Seattle.

NTSB Lauds FAA's Quick Action on Eclipse 500 Throttle Problem

A June 5 approach to Chicago's Midway Airport revealed left and right engine control can be lost if the throttle position signal exceeds its maximum range.

Monro Muffler Brake Faces $107,000 in Fines Following Employee Complaint

The Glastonbury, Conn., inspection begun in December 2007 identified several conditions that had earlier been cited at Monro locations in Massachusetts and New Hampshire.

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