Human Resources


Five Changing Trends in Managing Workplace Ergonomics

Traditionally, safety professionals have driven ergonomic improvements in an effort to reduce injuries, but all along they have been the wrong people to do this.

The 40 percent linkage to alcohol in both workplace and road fatalities is strong evidence that alcohol abuse is pervasive.

The Business Case for Workplace Alcohol Prevention

Workplace alcohol abuse need not be accepted as an inevitable cost of doing business.

In organizations with high employee absenteeism rates (more than 15 percent), the implementation of a drug testing program appears to have an impact.

Drug Testing Promotes Workplace Safety

You can maintain your program effectiveness by understanding which drugs are being abused and modifying your testing panel based on that information.

The process of putting a new safety incentive program into place is at least intricate. If you do not have a process in mind for completing the journey, it can be practically impossible.

The Winding Staircase to Setting Up a Safety Incentive Program

There are many steps in implementing one for the workplace. Sometimes the last step is the hardest.

IAQ Complaints: Survival Techniques for the Safety Professional

Sometimes you cannot find a solution that works. Admit it and keep trying to find answers, but know that some complaints you may never be able to solve.

While not all older adults have hearing loss, the likelihood of noise-induced hearing loss and other hearing impairment increases as we age.

Better Together

Companies see advantages from linking safety and wellness.

Home Depot Violates Electrical Safety Regulations

The hardware chain is facing a $69,300 penalty for violating safety standards in a Chicago location.

Controlling Facility Noise with Curtain Walls

If source sound levels increase for any reason, it is very simple to add a second layer of flexible sound curtain to an existing one or even to augment an existing rigid wall.



Job Stress Worsens Employees' Health

A study published in the September issue of the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine evaluated this among workers in the Detroit area, which was hit hard in the recent recession.

Food Plant's Workers Celebrate 10 Years of Zero Lost Time

About 70 employees work at Rich Products Corporation's facility in Waycross, Ga., which opened Aug. 19, 2002, and has completed a decade with no lost-time injuries.

1,000 Washington State Employers Have Tapped Stay at Work

Many businesses aren't sure how they can use the program, which is meant to keep injured workers on the job in light-duty positions.

GSA Announces Travel Reimbursement Freeze

The move will save $20 million in fiscal 2013, and five ideas submitted by employees will save an estimated $5.53 million, the agency announced Aug. 22.

California DIR Backs Comp Reform Plan

The director of Cal/OSHA's parent agency said the plan will solve several problems "before projected rate increases push California to a crisis situation."

Lloyd's Unit Offers D&O Policy for Emerging Global Risks

The Lloyd's-based insurance group Navigators Syndicate is writing the new directors and officers product to cover civil fines and penalties assessed under sections of Sarbanes Oxley, Dodd-Frank, and the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Slight Drop in Comp Benefits Paid in 2010

The National Academy of Social Insurance reported it resulted mainly from a 2.1 percent drop in medical benefits for injured workers.

Workers with Paid Sick Leave Injured Less Frequently

They're 28 percent less likely to suffer a non-fatal occupational injury, according to a NIOSH study published in the American Journal of Public Health.

Governors' Group Chair to Focus on Disabled Employment

The new chair of the National Governors Association, Delaware's Jack Markell, announced the new initiative as the association ended its annual meeting.

How to Reform Disability Insurance Finances?

The program has paid more in benefits than it took in each year since 2009. The Congressional Budget Office looked at the options to see how the program could be returned to financial stability.

Lump Sum Comp Settlements Helpful, Study Shows

The Workers Compensation Research Institute released its "Return to Work after a Lump-Sum Settlement" study July 11.

EBSA Settles with Electric Cooperative Association

The National Rural Electric Cooperative Association will restore $27 million to three of its employee benefit plans covered by ERISA.

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