OSHA issues the violations after a worker became engulfed in a grain bin earlier in the year.
He admitted not protecting workers from hydrogen sulfide, which killed two truck drivers in 2008 and 2009.
The fact sheet suggests that when the battery is not stored properly, the respirator may not perform correctly.
OSHA issued $77,000 in fines to Rebecca Minkoff for allegedly breaking several safety rules.
The Pattern of Violations screening is the first one conducted since MSHA's revised rule went into effect on March 25, 2013.
OSHA issued the violations and fines totaling $56,000 to EJ USA.
The factory is cited for the fines after an investigation prompted by a 15-year-old worker who lost an arm from a woodworking machine.
Half of the 2,607 sites visited in September by HSE inspectors failed basic standards.
Employers from five states are cited for a variety of hazards in Berlin, N.H.
The retailer releases the Sustainable Product Standard, which assesses the safety of beauty products, cleaners and baby care products and aims to force manufacturers to eliminate harmful chemicals used in the products.
A new change in gun laws permits employers to control whether or not guns are allowed in their workplaces, but not whether or not guns are allowed in the parking lot.
The FDA has proposed a rule to create a Foreign Supplier Verification Program to regulate food imported from abroad, as well as one that would create an accreditation program for third-party auditors.
The citations for an unsafe workplace total more than $34,000 in fines.
The emergency regulations announced Oct. 11 would implement a methodology for collecting an annual assessment to fund the state plan's Process Safety Management Program.
Though the shutdown prevented OSHA from announcing it, the agency has proposed $118,300 in fines again Adair Grain Inc., which owned the fertilizer storage facility that blew up in the Texas town.
Attorney General Pam Bondi filed the emergency rule this week that designates them a Schedule I substances.
The agency's chairman said carryover funds are exhausted, and the agency cannot function without a new appropriation.
One occurred in West Virginia, another in Illinois, and the third in Wyoming, the Charleston Gazette's Ken Ward Jr. reported.
From Sept. 29 to Oct. 11, 2013, institute participants discuss nuclear safety, security safeguards, and more.
Due to the recent government shutdown, investigations into workplace safety and discrimination come to a stop.