Hazmat


HSE posted this photo of the heater that Paul Lee turned on in his living room in November 2007. Ten hours later, a cleaner found him unconscious, and Lee died of a heart attack while being transported to a hospital.

Big UK Pub Chain Fined for CO Death

Enterprise Inns plc was fined $478,000 in a case involving a tenant landlord who died in November 2007 of carbon monoxide poisoning. The company owns about 7,700 pubs across the United Kingdom.

Packaging Plant Penalized for 60 Alleged Violations; Faces $137K Fine

"Our inspections identified a broad cross-section of electrical, mechanical, chemical, fire, and fall hazards throughout the workplace," said Paul Mangiafico, OSHA's acting area director in Hartford, Conn.

Stronger Warning from FAA on Lithium Batteries

The agency on Friday alerted operators that the UPS cargo plane that crashed in Dubai on Sept. 3 was carrying large quantities of lithium batteries and that Halon 1301, the suppression agent used in Class C cargo compartments, is ineffective in controlling a lithium metal cell fire.

WISHA Issues Record Fine for Tesoro Explosion

L&I announced it has cited Tesoro for 39 willful violations and five serious violations of state workplace safety and health regulations, fining the company $2.39 million. This is the largest fine in the agency’s history.

The second annual contest attracted a new high of 42 products in 17 award categories.

OH&S Salutes 2010 New Product of the Year Winners

Sixteen companies win top honors in the magazine's second annual contest, with trophies and ribbons handed out Tuesday at the National Safety Council Congress & Expo in San Diego.

Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics Unveals Level B Hazmat Suit

Market Manager Peter A. Kirk said the "decision to engineer a Level B suit was based on feedback we received from firefighters, military personnel, law enforcement and occupational safety professionals who were looking for the quality of Saint-Gobain’s material technology in a Level B suit."

Flexible Foam Firm Fined $72,000 for Combustible Dust Hazards, More

The company is being cited for allegedly failing to keep an area clean and free of dangerous accumulations of explosive and combustible foam dust and for failing to install machine guards on cutting machines to protect workers from amputation hazards.

EPA and ExxonMobil Settle Case for Closure of Illegal Acid Waste Impoundments

EPA and ExxonMobil agreed to settle a case involving more than one billion gallons of illegally stored hazardous waste at the Agrifos Fertilizer site in Pasadena, Texas.



Employees have both a need and a right to know the identities and hazards of the chemicals to which they are exposed at work.

Think You Know HazCom?

Safety professionals have long had concerns with MSDSs, beginning with issues about the ability of workers to understand them.

With the new transfer method, it was now possible to meet the North Carolina closed-used safety codes for dispensing liquids from five-gallon containers on the fourth floor.

Solving 'Open Use' Storage of Solvents

Dispensing solvents from large containers into smaller ones or spending more to buy solvents in smaller containers weren't appealing. This pharmaceutical company found a different solution for meeting the fire codes.

Automated MSDS Distribution

The new requirements will be a compliance burden for many businesses. Automated distribution is the "Easy Button" for HazCom compliance.

"Under these new rules," said Interior Secretary Ken Salazar, "operators will need to comply with tougher requirements for everything from well design and cementing practices to blowout preventers and employee training."

Interior Secretary Announces New Drilling Rules

They're the Drilling Safety Rule and the Workplace Safety Rule. The latter applies to all offshore oil and gas operations in federal waters and will require each operator to develop and follow a 13-point Safety and Environmental Management System.

U.S. Chemical Safety Board Chairman Rafael Moure-Eraso spoke of "a growing crisis of safety in the oil sector."

Steelworkers See Pattern in Oil Industry Incidents

At a conference preparing for national oil bargaining in 2012, union Vice President Gary Beevers described a mentality of running equipment until it fails and delaying turnarounds.

Dr. Patrick Gallagher, NIST director

NIST Director Creates Blue Ribbon Safety Panel

Meeting Oct. 12 and Oct. 20, the commissioners will examine progress to date on integrating safety throughout the Commerce Department organization.

Harwood Targeted Grants for Green Jobs, MSDs, Nano, More

Sixteen organizations receive $2.75 million in one-year grants to develop training materials about nanomaterials, work zone safety, green roofing jobs, beryllium, and several others.

FMCSA Shifts Schedule for Calculating Driver Crash Rates

Instead of calculating them on a calendar-year basis for purposes of deciding hazardous materials safety permit eligibility, it will use a fiscal-year basis starting Oct. 1 to give motor carriers three months to preview the rates.

OSHA Nails Picture Frame Maker for Combustible Dust Hazards, More

OSHA is proposing $228,320 in penalties for 34 safety and health violations found at Art Horizons Inc. in Batesville, Miss.

Virtually Yours: ASSE's Petroleum Safety Symposium

A solid lineup of speakers and sessions cover offshore and land operational safety lessons from Kleen Energy, BP, and more Sept. 21-23.

Fruit Processing Plant to Pay $106,000 for Failing to Report Ammonia Release

According to case documents, EPA alleges that Tree Top failed to immediately notify emergency response authorities after the ammonia release occurred and also failed to submit the required reporting documents.

CSB Chief Appoints Managing Director

Dr. Daniel Horowitz, the U.S. Chemical Safety Board's director of congressional, public, and board affairs, got the promotion and unanimous approval from the board's members.

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