Facility Safety


Creating Healing Environments with Evidence-Based Design

Such designs reduce staff stress and fatigue, improve patient safety, lower patient stress, and raise overall health care quality.

The tour of the three-story Southface Eco Office is sold out. This building has a green roof and earned both Platinum LEED and ENERGY STAR certification.

All Eyes Turn to Atlanta

IFMA's 2010 World Workplace Conference & Expo opens Oct. 27 at the Georgia World Congress Center, giving thousands of facility management professionals a look at the newest products, greenest buildings, and best strategies for their careers and their operations back home.

Jacobs Engineering Group Gains VPP Corporate Approval

OSHA announced its approval of the Pasadena, Calif.-based engineering and construction firm on Monday.

U.S. Chemical Safety Board Chairman Rafael Moure-Eraso spoke of "a growing crisis of safety in the oil sector."

Steelworkers See Pattern in Oil Industry Incidents

At a conference preparing for national oil bargaining in 2012, union Vice President Gary Beevers described a mentality of running equipment until it fails and delaying turnarounds.

Golf Course Worker Files OSHA Whistleblower Charge Against Southwestern Oklahoma Development Authority

Gy Bennar, a former landscaping and maintenance worker for the public golf course at the Clinton-Sherman Industrial Airpark, filed a whistleblower retaliation charge against the Southwestern Oklahoma Development Authority irrigating a golf course with untreated effluent from sewage that had not undergone proper filtration or chlorination, exposing both golfers and workers to potentially harmful toxins.

ICC Offers Free Download of Energy Code

According to DOE, the 2009 IECC now available will produce approximately 15 percent in residential energy efficiency gains compared to the 2006 edition.

Dr. Patrick Gallagher, NIST director

NIST Director Creates Blue Ribbon Safety Panel

Meeting Oct. 12 and Oct. 20, the commissioners will examine progress to date on integrating safety throughout the Commerce Department organization.

Maine Wood Mill Fined $119,500 Following Lockout/Tagout Fatality

A worker died when he became caught in moving parts of a machine known as a stacker, which activated while he was inside the machine performing maintenance.



Senate Bill Maps Reform of Federal Protective Service

The agency that provides security for thousands of government buildings is understaffed and badly managed, Homeland Security Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman and others on the committee say.

Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach Wins Excellence Award

Criteria considered for the annual Secretary of the Navy award include mishap trend analysis, safety inspections, and initiatives beyond what the Navy's safety regulations require.

Poultry Processing Plant Slapped with Penalties for Repeat Hazards

OSHA began its inspection in March after receiving a complaint concerning ammonia odors, trip and struck-by hazards, cuts, and stabbing injuries. The investigation was expanded to all areas of the facility when inspectors observed a high number of safety hazards.

CVS Pharmacy Fined $89,000 for Hazards in Connecticut

A single citation for obstructed exit routes alone amounted to $70,000 because the company was cited for similar conditions at other locations three years ago, making it a recurring hazard.

Dollar Tree Stores Hit with $56K Fine

The OSHA area director urged the company to evaluate all of its store locations for hazards after this latest filing.

The seminar will focus mainly on using NFPA 654 to manage dust explosion hazards.

October Events Focus on Preventing Dust Explosions

An Oct. 19 seminar and Oct. 20-21 symposium are in Kansas City, Mo., sponsored by the NFPA and its affiliated Fire Protection Research Foundation, will include a case study by Imperial Sugar's vice president of Manufacturing & Engineering.

CSB Commissions Methyl Isocyanate Study

The U.S. Chemical Safety Board is responding to a congressional mandate for a yearlong, $575,000 study by the National Academy of Sciences on how to reduce or eliminate the stockpile at Bayer CropScience's plant in Institute, W.Va.

DHS plans to expand the If You See Something Say Something campaign nationally with public education materials.

FEMA Hosts Webinar on Remaining Vigilant, Stopping Threats

The event is part of a campaign designed to raise public awareness of indicators of terrorism, crime, and other threats and emphasize the importance of reporting suspicious activity to the proper transportation and law enforcement authorities.

ASSE Makes Plea for Labor Day Roadway Safety

As far as holiday weekends go, only Thanksgiving, July Fourth, and Memorial Day have more roadway fatalities—and nearly half of those are alcohol related.

Brass Foundry Cited for 'Deliberate' Lead-Exposure Hazards

The citations allege, among other things, that the company did not take air samples as required for workers who were overexposed to airborne lead nor provide the required annual training associated with the hazards. An additional willful violation alleges that the company stopped providing hearing tests to employees overexposed to noise.

September is National Preparedness Month.

Emergency Physicians to Public: Prepare Now Before Disaster Strikes

Hurricane Earl, a Category 2 storm this morning, now poses little danger to the U.S. eastern seaboard. But the hurricane season isn't over, and other threats are out there.

How Safety Fits with Sustainability

If we continue to focus on the tactical issues and play "safety cop," we will impede efforts to suggest safety is truly a foundation for sustainable growth.

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