Risk Management


Philips Signs with NY Yankees to Provide X-Rays, AEDs

"Determining the extent of an injury quickly and effectively is critical to getting the player the best course of action and onto the road to recovery," said Yankees team physician Christopher Ahmad, M.D.

CSB Video Captures a Decade of Safety Lessons

The need for training, communications, and community planning is made clear in the video released June 10 by the federal agency.

National Transportation Safety Board Chair Deborah A.P. Hersman

Obama Chooses Hersman to Chair NTSB

A board member for five years, she has been on-scene member at 15 events, including the devastating 2005 freight train chlorine spill in Graniteville, S.C.

Florida Firm Fined $105,000 for Repeat Saw Hazards, 9 Serious Violations

"The penalties being proposed are larger because the company had been warned of these violations at two of its locations but chose not to make the needed corrections at all of its plants," said Les Grove, OSHA's area director in Tampa, Fla.

Africanized bees aggressively defend their nests and sting quickly.

ASSE Sends 'Killer Bees' Alert

"This is a major threat," says Teresa Dwyer, CSP. "It can cost several hundreds of dollars to have a professional remove an AHB hive and, without the correct protective equipment and training, the potential rescuer may become an additional victim."

MSHA Sets July 8 Hearing on Dust Personal Monitors

Post-hearing comments will be due by Aug. 14. The agency's proposed rule addresses a new technology, a monitor to be worn by coal miners throughout a shift that reports dust exposure levels continuously.

Dr. Maurice A. Ramirez, pandemic flu and surge planning expert

Expert Urges Employers to Stay Ready for Flu

With 25,288 confirmed cases of influenza A(H1N1) as of June 8, the threat of a serious outbreak has not disappeared, says pandemic expert Dr. Maurice A. Ramirez. He recommends offering a "flu benefit" and says employers should prepare for having 30 percent of their workers unavailable because of flu.

a gas pipeline

Bellingham, Washington Authorities Remember Pipeline Victims

Ten years ago today, Liam Wood, 18, Stephen Tsiorvas, 10, and Wade King, 10, died in a fireball from a leaking gasoline pipeline. The incident shocked the state and prompted a stronger federal law governing underground pipeline inspections and enforcement.



DIA Conference to Feature Sessions on Drug Labeling, Pandemic Flu

The pandemic flu session will focus on industry approaches toward interactions with FDA, and the latest biochemical methods for the development of vaccines.

NTSB Hearing Has Safety on the Radar

In its examination of how US Airways Flight 1549 was able to avoid tragedy after striking geese and safely ditching in the Hudson River on Jan. 15, the hearing will focus in part on developments in technologies such as radar for bird tracking.

Workers Need at Least 11 Hours Off Between Shifts

Studies have shown that rest periods of 10 hours or less between consecutive shifts result in short sleep episodes, sometimes lasting only three to five hours.

2009 World Day Against Child Labor logo

Solis, Harkin on Child Labor Roundtable This Week

Their conversation will call attention to June 12's 2009 World Day Against Child Labor, an international event to focus attention on the continuing problem of the exploitation of girls in child labor.

Judith Hackitt, chair of Britains Health and Safety Executive

Great Britain Unveils New OSH Strategy

The Health and Safety Executive introduced the strategy June 3 as a way to achieve much lower injury and fatality numbers. Managers' role in training and motivating safe work will be critical in achieving the goals.

Navy Agrees to Reduce Copper Discharges into Puget Sound

According to EPA, the copper in the naval shipyard's wastewater comes from sandblasting and painting of vessels in dry dock at the shipyard. The shipyard is allowed to discharge its wastewater into Sinclair Inlet, but only if the wastewater complies with the site's NPDES permit.

Asphalt Plant Owner Fined for Failing to Protect Emergency Responders, Public

The Phoenix-based facility stores asphalt cement, boiler oil, and diesel fuel at levels requiring reporting, but it failed to provide chemical hazard information and submit a chemical inventory to local authorities, EPA said.

USCG to Conduct Search & Rescue Demo, Canoe Safety Overview

According to the Coast Guard, the New England region suffered the loss of 55 recreational boaters and paddlers in 2008. Four kayak and 10 canoe fatalities accounted for 25 percent of the total.

Idaho Mine Operator Pays for NPDES Permit Violations

Water quality within the South Fork of the Coeur d'Alene River is severely degraded due to dissolved metals from historic mining activities, EPA said, noting that major tributaries are devoid of aquatic life due to high concentrations of dissolved metals.

Lessons Learned from Las Vegas

June 3, 2008, was not just another hot day on the Las Vegas Strip. After 12 workers died in 18 months on Strip construction projects (an average of one worker every six weeks), some 7,000 construction workers on the CityCenter and Cosmopolitan work sites walked off the job over safety concerns.

Washington State Airs Safety Ads Emphasizing 'Homecomings'

The state's safety administration purchased and repurposed the campaign from Australia, where surveys showed that about 85 percent of viewers thought it was quite or very effective. Also, 24 percent of employers and 18 percent of employees said they had personally taken action as a result of the ads. L&I said this was considered a very strong result in a low-interest category such as occupational safety and health.

Texas Drywall Contractor Fined $60,000 Following Worker's Fatal Fall

"In this case, a worker was unloading materials from a box that was being elevated on a lift truck that became unstable, causing the worker to fall 36 feet to his death," said Stephen Boyd, OSHA's area director in Dallas.

Featured

Artificial Intelligence

Webinars