Regulatory & Standards


Disney, DC Crashes Spotlight Train Control Systems

With two OSHA investigators on the scene, Walt Disney World yesterday reopened the monorail line where one of its trains struck another train early Sunday morning, local newspapers reported.

MSHA Announces Monitors Proposed Rule Hearing

The Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) and the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) will hold a public hearing on the proposed rule to revise existing requirements to approve sampling devices that monitor miner exposure to respirable coal mine dust.

Tailgate Training Card 10: Heat Stress

This California Department of Public Health training aid says the best way to prevent heat stress is to keep your body cool by drinking plenty of water and taking breaks to cool off when needed.

June 2009 Myth of the Month

Britain's Health and Safety Executive set the record straight last month on the question of wearing flip-flops to work.

Worker Safety Series: Construction Pocket Guide

OSHA Publication 3252-05N, offers assistance with construction hazards of all kinds. Some of its contents concern protective footwear and the requirements for equipping workers properly when they may be exposed to hazards.

ASSE, ILO Sign Memorandum of Understanding at Safety 2009

"As there are no global marketplace boundaries today and with a large number of our 32,000 occupational safety, health and environmental (SH&E) professional members continuing to work in countries and projects around the world, this agreement will help us move forward in preventing injuries and illnesses worldwide," said ASSE President Warren K. Brown, CSP, ARM, CSHM.

Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor: 'There's a New Sheriff in Town'

"You are not alone," Jordan Barab assured the packed audience of safety professionals present for ASSE's Safety 2009 in San Antonio. "We have your back and your fight is our fight."

Solis Announces Texas Construction Enforcement Blitz

OSHA inspection personnel from other states will be in Texas in July to check for unsafe scaffolds, fall hazards, trenching violations, and other potential injury and fatality hazards, the Labor secretary announced in her speech Monday morning at Safety 2009.



Former Managing Pharmacist Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Defraud

The former managing pharmacist at a Middlesex County pharmacy pleaded guilty today to conspiring to defraud health insurers, including the federal Medicaid program, by submitting phony claims for reimbursement for prescription drugs, Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr., announced.

Wastewater Treatment Plant Pays for Chemical Reporting Violation

The Illinois facility was storing chlorine and diesel fuel over the minimum threshold level and failed to provide emergency and hazardous chemical inventory forms to state and local authorities, EPA said.

OSHA, Centennial Contractors Enterprises Sign Safety Alliance

Centennial Contractors Enterprises and the OSHA Region X have signed an alliance establishing a collaborative relationship to foster safer and more healthful American workplaces. Through the alliance, Centennial employees and others will be provided with information, guidance, and access to training resources.

OSHA Nationwide Inspection Program Focuses on Federal Worker Safety

OSHA recently announced that it is continuing its nationwide program to emphasize workplace safety and health for federal workers and for those contractors whose work is supervised on a daily basis by federal agency personnel.

CSB to Begin Chemical Release Reporting Rulemaking

The agency wants comments by Aug. 4 on how it should write a rule that will require accidental chemical releases to be reported to it or to the National Response Center.

MSHAs photo of the rescue capsule used at the Quecreek No. 1 Mine to save nine miners in July 2002

Commission Weighing $110,000 in Quecreek Penalties

This capsule's use in the rescue of nine Pennsylvania miners trapped by an inundation in July 2002 captivated the nation. Their rescue would never have been needed if two companies penalized in these two cases had insisted on accurate maps, an administrative law judge ruled.

OSHA Won't Add Shorter Bitrex Qualitative Fit Test

The test is "not sufficiently accurate to include among the qualitative fits tests listed in Part II of Appendix A of its Respiratory Protection Standard," the agency said in its Federal Register notice.

NACOSH to Discuss Diacetyl, Ethics Rules

Updates on OSHA and NIOSH activities also will be presented at the July 15 meeting.

railroad locomotive

Rail Crashworthiness, Maintenance Worker Rules Nearly Done

The Federal Railroad Administration's Rail Safety Advisory Committee will meet June 25 in Washington, D.C., with several of its projects about to reach the proposed or final rule stage, FRA said in a new update.

NY Railroad Ordered to Pay $300,000 for Retaliating Against Workers

OSHA has ordered the Metro North Commuter Railroad Inc., which provides commuter rail service in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, to take corrective actions and pay each of the four complainants $75,000 in punitive damages.

EEOC Makes ‘Historic’ Move to Revise Disability-Proving Rules

Acting Chairman Stuart J. Ishimaru said that in approving the proposed regulations EEOC was “taking a significant step toward returning the ADA to the broad and strong civil rights statute that Congress originally intended it to be.”

IFPAC-2010 Set for Baltimore; Abstract Submissions Invited

Focusing on the latest developments in process analytical technology, the event will feature a number of short courses, an exhibition, and networking receptions.

Featured

Artificial Intelligence

Webinars