A subpoena ordered Barry Cadden, president and co-owner of the New England Compounding Center, to appear at the Nov. 14 hearing and testify.
Mireille Ballestrazzi, deputy central director of the French Judicial Police, was elected to serve a four-year term.
A new feature on the federal agency's website, a 100-year timeline of significant events, is similar to the Safety Trail that was a highlight of last month's 2012 National Safety Congress & Expo.
After receiving nine citations since 2000, a contracting company will be making big changes to improve safety.
The agency has informed the GWA there are deficiencies in water quality, based on a May 2012 inspection.
OSHA has filed 11 safety and health violations, including two classified as willful, against Dedicated TCS LLC.
How The Avalon Effect Inc. of Franklin, Tenn., has marketed its Quantum Series Personal Wellness Pack prompted the Nov. 5 letter, according to the agency.
Ramona Prieto is the California Highway Patrol's highest-ranking female officer and also was its first female motorcycle officer.
The world's largest producer and consumer of coal will be taking measures this month to assess mining safety throughout the nation.
U.S. Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., said he will introduce his legislation Nov. 2.
Before Dec. 15, conduct an on-site compliance check. Confirm that workers elevated 6 feet or more above the lower level of a structure have OSHA-acceptable forms of fall protection.
Ameridose LLC is a sister company to the New England Compouding Center (NECC), which produced contaminated injectable steroid drugs that have been linked to 29 deaths and 377 cases thus far.
OSHA is about to begin enforcing an interpretation of 29 CFR 1926.501(b)(13), which requires workers 6 feet or more above lower levels to be protected by guardrail systems, safety net systems, personal fall arrest systems, or alternative fall protection measures allowed by other provisions of 29 CFR 1926.501(b) for particular types of work.
Coal mine inspections for September produce 150 citations.
The city's Department of Buildings and its Department of Investigation announced the arrests Oct. 25 and said one of the people arrested is a construction company owner charged with possessing 32 fraudulent scaffold certification cards he had made.
Following the largest refinery fire in Singapore's history, the oil giant has received $80,000 in fines.
Writing in the Fall 2012 issue of Johns Hopkins Public Health, Dean Michael J. Klag calls for the same kind of collaboration as has been used to reduce annual traffic deaths significantly.
The Form 483 posted by the agency covers five October inspections of the Framingham, Mass., compounding pharmacy.
The firm was fined $300,000 on Oct. 26.
The agency also is drafting amendments to its regulations to adapt to OSHA's crane operator accreditation requirement by Nov. 10, 2014.