Training


Sparky's Web Site Updated

Children learn fire safety through new interactive features on the site, according to NFPA, which says around 300 children ages 3-9 die from fires per year in the United States.

ASSE Virtual Symposium to Address Safety Training Issues

The American Society of Safety Engineers (ASSE) will be host to a "Solutions in Safety Training" virtual symposium on Jan. 26-28. The symposium will feature safety training and communications professionals who will explore real-world solutions for developing training that delivers, including a special mini-workshop by trainer Sivasailam "Thiagi" Thiagarajan, Ph.D., on rapid training design.

NCD to Hold Public Meeting for Input on Disability Employment

The council uses the input it gathers from its public meetings held around the country to review and evaluate federal programs and legislation and to provide the President, Congress, and federal agencies with advice and recommendations.

EPA to Host Symposium on Green Preservation of Older Buildings

A free one-day symposium on current approaches and innovations in green preservation of older buildings will be held in Indianapolis on Jan. 21, 2010. The event, which begins at 8:30 a.m., will be hosted by the Environmental Protection Agency Region 5 at the Columbia Club hotel and meeting center, 121 Monument Circle. Government rate rooms are available to symposium registrants. Required registration for the event closes Jan. 7.

OSHA's San Antonio Office Gets Gift of Status Upgrade, More Staff

The agency's newest area office serves 17 central Texas counties and offers bilingual assistance to the predominantly Hispanic population.

Capital Safety Introduces Wind Energy Fall Protection Training Courses

Capital Safety, home of the DBI-SALA and PROTECTA brands, recently announced that it has added three fall protection training courses for the wind energy industry to its roster of training offerings, including Competent Person, Competent Rescuer, and Competent Rescuer Trainer.

USFA Releases 'Fire in the United States' Report

United States Fire Administrator Kelvin J. Cochran recently announced the availability of the fifteenth edition of Fire in the United States. This edition covers the 5-year period from 2003 to 2007, with a primary focus on 2007.

DOL Awards Grant for Financial Workers Affected by Layoffs

The Department of Labor has announced a $3,874,594 grant to assist about 725 workers affected by layoffs at seven companies in Massachusetts' financial industry.



EPA Studying Outdoor Air Near Schools

The agency's Schools Air Toxics Initiative, which is monitoring the air around 63 schools in 22 states, is checking for several contaminants associated with industrial and mobile sources such as cars, trucks, and airplanes.

Physicians Develop Fast Method to Estimate Blood Loss at Scene of Trauma

Determining blood loss at the scene of trauma can be critical to successful patient treatment. Health care workers such as emergency medical technicians have used visual estimation, which can be highly inaccurate, as their only means of determining volumes of blood loss. A new, simple method developed by UMDNJ-Robert Wood Johnson Medical School may drastically improve their accuracy.

Welding, Scaffolding Among Issues Scheduled for Upcoming Maritime Committee

OSHA will hold a two-day Maritime Advisory Committee for Occupational Safety and Health (MACOSH) meeting Jan. 19-20, 2010, in Washington, D.C., to address welding, scaffolding, and other safety and health issues in maritime industries.

The Health and Safety Executive "Make the Promise" campaign urges British farmers to do everything possible to prevent themselves from being hurt at work.

UK Agricultural Safety Campaign Wins Gold Award

"Make the Promise" has persuaded 15,000 farmers thus far to promise to work safely for the sake of their families.

New EEOC Guides Aid Federal Hiring of Disabled

With fewer individuals with severe disabilities working for the federal government, "The ABCs of Schedule A" are guides to help anyone involved in the federal hiring process.

CityCenter is an $8.5 billion, 67-acre development on the Las Vegas Strip.

CityCenter Projects Opening with Galas

Six construction worker fatalities on the mammoth project figured prominently in OSHA’s Oct. 20, 2009, critical report on the Nevada OSHA agency’s performance and earned a Pulitzer Prize in April for the Las Vegas Sun.

Sherwin-Williams Co. Merits Recognition, OSHA Says

The company's proactive approach toward safety is a model for others to follow," said Charles E. Adkins, OSHA's regional administrator in Kansas City, Mo.

The OSHA logo

DOL Steps Up 'Open Government' Efforts

As part of the Obama administration's commitment to improved accountability, transparency, and service to the American public, the department of labor has recently announced a broad array of efforts designed to improve the public's accessibility to its agencies and to ensure the department can function more effectively.

a pile of cash

Big Appropriations Bill Passed

A key Senate vote on Saturday prevents a filibuster, so the combined funding bills are set for a Sunday final vote. OSHA would get a $45 million boost from its FY2009 funding and MSHA a 3.1 percent increase.

This CFD photo show the memorial for 21 Chicago firefighters, including Fire Marshal James Horan, who died Dec. 22, 1910, in the Great Stockyard Fire.

Chicago Fire Department Selects QRAE Four-Gas Monitor

The department has more than 200 of the units deployed at 102 firehouses and is encouraging all firefighters to obtain level A or B technician certification.

Sleep apnea may afflict as many as 28 percent of commercial drivers, according to studies.

Trucking Sleep Apnea Conference Announced

The May 12 meeting at a hotel near Baltimore and Washington will bring experts together to seek solutions to a problem that may afflict as many as 28 percent of commercial drivers. An indication of the federal interest in this issue is the fact NTSB Chairman Deborah A.P. Hersman will deliver a May 11 keynote speech.

Sprinkler Installer's Fall Leads to Investigation, $61K in Fines

"The need for fall protection was clear and recognized, yet this employer did not provide this basic, commonsense, and legally required safeguard," said Paul Mangiafico, OSHA's area director for Middlesex and Essex counties.

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