Dent Wizard faces $51K in fines for safety failures.
The agency is concerned that the products may pose serious risks to patients.
Explosions in restaurant ovens, curing ovens, a lead smelting furnace, electric arc furnaces, clothes dryers, grain dryers, a coal dryer, and a grain dryer are included in the document. Survey respondents listed human error as the cause of the explosion more than any other cause.
One willful citation was issued to Jay Management Inc.
The company was previously cited in 2012 for machine hazards, according to OSHA.
Stakeholders' concerns range from asbestos and lead-based paint typically found in older and/or legacy data centers to fire-resistant clothing, contractor and construction management, elevated work such as portable and fixed ladders, and rooftop maintenance.
For this manufacturer of organic chemicals operating many smaller processes, a single centralized thermal oxidizer system was the most cost-effective path to expand production while meeting new emission controls requirements.
The agency has fined Catanzaro & Sons Enterprise for $49K.
OSHA has determined that the injury was preventable.
The new EPA revisions came about because a working group of federal agency representatives assembled to implement the executive order identified modernizing the RMP rule as one of the top priorities to improve U.S. chemical facilities' safety and security.
The manufacturer supplies auto parts to Kia and Hyundai.
The citations come following a worker injury at a Colorado Springs plant.
The safety board has a public meeting scheduled from 6-9 p.m. in Waco, Texas, near the explosion site.
OSHA has cited the employer for one other-than-serious violation for not recording 26 instances of work-related injuries and illnesses on the 300 log.
The company, Peconic Recycling & Transfer Corp., faces $119,000 in fines.
There is a March 1 deadline for public comments on whether the association should develop a standard addressing design, construction, installation, and commissioning of these increasingly popular systems.
OSHA has proposed more than $88,000 in fines.
The Monmouth Junction, N.J., facility faces more than $61,000 in fines.
There will not be a 10-mile emergency planning zone identified in Vermont Yankee's license, according to NRC's announcement.
The settlement agreement with OSHA implements safeguards to protect workers at Dollar Tree stores nationwide from hazards associated with blocked emergency exits, obstructed access to exit routes, electrical equipment, and improper storage of materials. It commits Dollar Tree to pay $825,000 in penalties arising from 13 different inspections.