OSHA has cited Reybold Homes Inc. for willfully violating safety laws.
A construction worker is dead after falling from a stage being built in a parking lot outside the University of Phoenix Stadium.
Two Canadian executives were sentenced to 25 days in jail after the 2013 warehouse accident.
ASSE's SeminarFest 2015 will take place Feb. 6-12 at the Rio All-Suite Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas. The event features 82 workshops and seminars on a wide variety of topics.
OSHA's case against the metal fuel-tank fabricator involves 25 serious violations.
The employers face more than $110,000 in fines for allegedly failing to provide protection.
Already added to OSHA's Severe Violator Enforcement Program, the company faces more than two dozen new violations.
2014 was a year of landmark decisions, calls to action, and unpredictable challenges to overcome. Here are a few of the biggest topics and headlines from the past year.
Here's what employers should know to safeguard employees.
OSHA has cited the Jacksonville, Fla., company for one willful violation.
The FR apparel manufacturer's resolutions will help workers and safety managers make sure their safety clothing, equipment, and procedures work as hard as they do in 2015.
The hazards occurred during framing of new residential units in Omaha, Neb.
The site was developed by faculty members at Washington University in St. Louis and supported by CPWR (the Center for Construction Research and Training) through a NIOSH cooperative agreement.
Austal USA LLC has been cited three times by OSHA in the past five years.
Southern Grouts and Mortars Inc. has been cited for eight violations after OSHA's Fort Worth area office investigated.
The agency's inspectors served more than 200 stop work notices during a month-long inspection initiative. The most common failure they found was employers' not providing basic safety measures for employees working at height -- 42 percent of all enforcement notices served cited this.
The agency's Nov. 4 newsletter summarizes five October 2014 preventable occupational fatalities.
The Freeport, Florida company is facing proposed penalties of more than $71,000.
OSHA has proposed fines of $174,240 for a lack of fall protection at 3 residential job sites.
Taking the time to identify floor safety hazards in all areas in and around a facility is the first step toward avoiding these common injuries.