Enforcement


Calif. Labor Commissioner Files Suit Against Janitorial Companies

California Labor Commissioner Angela Bradstreet and Attorney General Edmund G. Brown Jr. announced yesterday it has taken legal action against a Delaware company for failing to pay approximately 300 California janitorial workers proper wages and engaging in unfair business practices. Damages being sought could exceed $5 million.

Ohio-based Raw Steel Producer Faces $210,000 in Penalties

OSHA has inspected Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel Corp.10 times since 2004--including this follow-up to an inspection after an employee fatality occurred in February 2006.

Target Corp. Agrees to Pay $510,000 for Race Discrimination

U.S. District Judge Rudolph T. Randa yesterday signed a consent decree ending a lawsuit by the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission against Target Corp. for violating Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 by not hiring African Americans in the retail giant’s District 110 (Milwaukee and Madison, Wisc.) based on their race, and by failing to keep documents as required by law.

Stickler: Most Mine Violators Significantly Better

MSHA Chief Richard Stickler said 20 more mines have been warned they are on his agency's radar screen, while six of the original eight have made sufficient improvement.

Fireproof Door Maker Cited for 76 Violations, Faces $382,500 in Fines

"The sizable fines proposed here reflect the scope and seriousness of these conditions and the need for them to be promptly and effectively addressed," said Diana Cortez, director of OSHA's area office in Tarrytown, N.Y.

End of the Line Near for Johnson Controls?

A case before OSHRC argues there is no support for the key 1993 precedent allowing OSHA to cite recordkeeping violations years after they occurred.

OSHRC Confirms Per-Employee Penalties for LOTO Training Violations

Penalties in a 1991 case involving a GM auto plant in Oklahoma City were reduced to $692,000, but OSHA and DOL won an important victory.

Contractor Faces $116,200 in Fines for 'Imminent' Cave-in Situations

"Wherever and whenever this basic, common-sense and legally required safeguard is ignored, OSHA will continue to be present," said Patric Griffin, OSHA's area director in Providence, R.I.



Cape Cod Contractor Faces $34,200 in Fines for Nantucket Cave-in

"Employees should never be allowed into an excavation until it is properly and effectively protected against collapse," said Brenda Gordon, OSHA's area director in Braintree, Mass.

EEEC Sweep of Construction Sites Results in Fines of $83,600

Investigators with the Economic and Employment Enforcement Coalition, a multi-agency task force designed to root out California's underground economy, recently targeted Orange County businesses in the construction industry it said were operating illegally.

OSHA Determines Downrite Engineering Could Have Prevented Worker’s Death

OSHA Determines Downrite Engineering Could Have Prevented Worker’s Death

The Miami-based company faces a proposed $258,935 in penalties.

OSHA, DOL Launch Investigations into the Death of a 16-Year-Old Boy at Mar-Jac Poultry

OSHA, DOL Launch Investigations into the Death of a 16-Year-Old Boy at Mar-Jac Poultry

Another worker died in 2021 due to injuries at the Mississippi facility.

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