Construction Safety


Washington State L&I Files Permanent Rule on Heat-Related Illness

The department conducted six public hearings on the proposed rule and made changes to the final rule in response to hundreds of comments.

Construction Contractors Cited Following Fatality in Parking Garage Collapse

Two of the three firms cited are each receiving a willful violation for failing to have a qualified person determine if the structure could support the additional three-quarters of an inch of wet concrete weight that was added to the 20-inch floor slab.

ABC to Present Excellence in Construction Awards June 18

Companies with excellent safety records will be honored at the Washington, D.C., event by the association, which represents more than 24,000 non-union firms.

New England Roofer Faces $117,000 in Fines for Fall Hazards

"The sizable fines proposed in this case reflect both the seriousness and the recurrence of this potentially deadly and disabling hazard," said C. William Freeman III, OSHA's area director in Hartford, Conn.

OSHA Co-Sponsors Wisconsin Workplace Safety and Health Day

Making and keeping the workplace safe and healthy will be the focus of the 5th annual "Safety Day, June 12, in Pewaukee, Wis.

NIOSH, NHCA Introduce 'Safe-in-Sound' Award

The new award is designed to recognize excellence and innovation in hearing loss prevention.

NYC Adopts Revised Fire Code, Analyzes Child Fire Deaths

"Together, the new Fire and Building Codes will improve safety while also making it easier for construction professionals, designers, property owners, businesses, and others to work here more efficiently and understand their obligations under the law," NY Mayor Michael Bloomberg said.



Two Dead in Crane Collapse at NY Condominium Construction Site

The city's newspapers are reporting that a second construction worker died in the incident.

White Paper Focuses on Minimizing Risks, Costs of PCBs in Construction

"The regulation-driven remediation efforts can dramatically impact the cost of renovation or demolition, quickly costing millions of dollars for a single, large-scale project," said EH&E President and co-founder John McCarthy.

Major Builders Group Fighting Calif.'s Off-Road Diesel Emissions Standard

AGC of America says the new standards and rules would require California contractors to retrofit, re-power, or replace off-road diesel equipment at a cost expected to reach $13 billion.

After Considering Comments, OR-OSHA Changes Silica PEL

The new standard, OR-OSHA Administrative Order 6-2008 for general industry and construction, will be effective July 1.

OSHA, Forging Industry of America Renew Alliance

OSHA recently renewed its alliance with the Forging Industry of America (FIA), which will focus on issues related to ergonomics and machine guarding in the forging industry.

R.I. Contractor Cited for 'Willful' Cave-in Hazard, Other Violations

Inspectors found J.A.M. employees working in an excavation deeper than 6 feet that lacked adequate protection against cave-ins. OSHA standards require that all excavations 5 feet or deeper be protected against collapse.

NIOSH Adds Online Tool for Quick Hearing Protector Check

A sound that is barely audible at a worker's threshold of hearing without hearing protection should be inaudible though hearing protection even if it's boosted by 15 dB.

NYC Joins with OSHA in Five-Borough Alliance

The two partner agencies will work together to address the most common construction accidents that cause injuries, deaths, and incidents.

NSC Plans to 'Make a Difference' in June

"Make a Difference" is the theme of the National Safety Council's 2008 National Safety Month observance and a call to action to reverse the increase in accidental injuries and deaths.

Sole Long-Term Action in OSHA's Plans: Hearing in Construction

A reopened record on electrical rule and a revised HazCom standard in October are two highlights of the spring 2008 semiannual agenda.

We're Hot and Unbothered

Working a summer job many years ago on a crew of a county road repair department was my first full-time outdoor employment. Flagging for our paving machines and dump trucks that first day was a brutal education, but not because of the pace, the dust, the heat, or the toil. It was rough because I hadn’t known to bring my own jug of water. On Day Two and every work day thereafter, I was much better prepared.

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