Risk Management


Maine Wood Mill Fined $119,500 Following Lockout/Tagout Fatality

A worker died when he became caught in moving parts of a machine known as a stacker, which activated while he was inside the machine performing maintenance.

New ACOEM Guide Helps Employers Find Care for Injured Workers

The multi-page document provides practical advice, checklists, and other resources and tools to help identify physicians who adhere to best practices and are most likely to provide the best medical outcomes when treating workers’ compensation patients.

Senate Bill Maps Reform of Federal Protective Service

The agency that provides security for thousands of government buildings is understaffed and badly managed, Homeland Security Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman and others on the committee say.

Oregon Touts Comp Premium Rate Cut, Washington Awaits Election Day

Washington State can't propose 2011 workers' comp rates until the voters have passed or rejected Initiative 1082 on Nov. 2. It would let private insurance carriers write comp insurance and also would change how Washington determines premium rates.

APHA began Get Ready Day in 2006 and observes it annually on the third Tuesday of September, during Ready month activities.

Are You Ant or Grasshopper? APHA Wants to Know

Get Ready Day is Sept. 21, with flu preparedness a prime focus but general emergency readiness also important. The American Public Health Association's new materials include a video to test your approach.

Cave-in Hazards Lead to $112,000 Fine for Florida Contractor

"This employer had been renting a trench box designed to protect workers from cave-ins but returned it to cut down on costs," said Les Grove, OSHA's area director in Tampa, Fla. “Risking the safety of your workers is not an acceptable business decision."

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.

FDA Approves New Defibrillators to Treat Heart Failure

The three devices, all manufactured by Boston Scientific Corp., are intended to treat patients with left bundle branch block who have either mild heart failure or heart failure with no apparent symptoms.



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.

Porta-King Penalized $124,000 for Hazardous Spray Painting, More

The violations address hazards associated with spray painting outside of a predetermined, designated spray booth, and the use of powered industrial truck fork extensions without manufacturer notification, approval and determination of lifting capacity.

Pharmaceutical Firm to Pay $300 Million for Drug Distribution Violations

The company did not obtain drug approval, increased its distribution of Levothroid rather than scaling down, and ignored a subsequent warning letter to stop the manufacture and distribution of Levothroid.

Naval Weapons Station Seal Beach Wins Excellence Award

Criteria considered for the annual Secretary of the Navy award include mishap trend analysis, safety inspections, and initiatives beyond what the Navy's safety regulations require.

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.

LaHood Proposes Legislation to Increase Pipeline Enforcement, Penalties

The proposed “Strengthening Pipeline Safety and Enforcement Act of 2010” would increase from $1 million to $2.5 million the maximum fine for the most serious violations involving deaths, injuries, or major environmental harm. It also would provide additional resources for the enforcement program by authorizing 40 additional inspection and enforcement personnel over four years.

Painting Contractor Fined $225,200 for Scaffold, Fall Hazards

"Scaffolds must be properly erected and fall protection provided to employees when they work on scaffolds at heights of 10 feet or more, yet this employer has repeatedly neglected to implement these basic, commonsense and legally required safeguards," said Anthony Ciuffo, OSHA's Long Island area director in Westbury.

ABC National Construction Safety Awards Applications Due

The deadline is Sept. 24 for National Safety Excellence Awards being presented in February 201 in Orlando, Fla.

$466,400 Fine for Hazardous Dust Exposure, Inadequate PPE

"Even with employees covered head to toe in dust, the company still failed to provide breathing protection and other controls," said Assistant Secretary Dr. David Michaels.

If multiple languages are spoken and especially if otehr languages are not well understood in a workplace, one must consider multilingual signage.

Arc Flash Label Best Practices

When deciding what information to include on your company labels, always remember for whom the labels are posted: the electrician or maintenance person in the field.

Elderly Driver

NTSB to Host Aging Driver Safety Forum

The forum is intended to identify possible strategies to prevent accidents and reduce the number of injuries and fatalities within this growing segment of the nation's drivers.

Developing a safety and health management programs rule is part of instilling a culture of safety throughout the industry, MSHA indicated.

MSHA Moving on OSH Management Programs Rule

Three informal public meetings next month will gather information from the industry about effective safety and health management programs already in use at U.S. mines. Comments are due by Dec. 17.

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