Training


China Plans Safety Inspections of Offshore Facilities

The State Administration of Work Safety said the inspection program was begun because of the Bohai Bay oil spills that began in June. ConocoPhillips has agreed to create a fund to compensate victims of the spills.

OSHA Issues Compliance Directive to Address Workplace Violence

Workplace violence is a serious recognized occupational hazard, ranking among the top four causes of death in workplaces during the past 15 years.

Tough UK Dog Control Laws Aim to Protect Workers

The Communication Workers Union fought for enactment of new laws in Northern Ireland and Scotland that mean owners of attacking dogs can be imprisoned and fined.

Worker's Chain Saw Injury Leads to $153,600 Penalty

Three willful violations with penalties of $147,000 involve not providing protective leg coverings and eye or face shields to employees who operated chain saws, and not providing hard hats to employees working on the ground under trees.

MIT Fined $175,000 for Air Cargo Package Fire

FAA alleges that MIT offered a fiberboard box containing 33 electronic devices to FedEx for transportation by air from Cambridge, Mass., to Seattle on Aug. 25, 2009.

ICC: Building Safety Codes Changed as a Result of 9/11

The International Code Council’s activity heightened when the National Institute of Standards and Technology released its “Report on the Collapse of the World Trade Center,” which contained 30 broad recommendations for the model codes, standards industry, design community, and emergency responders.

Worker's Hand Contusion Leads to $46,200 Fine for Door Maker

OSHA cited Marshfield DoorSystems Inc. with one repeat and two alleged serious violations after a worker's hand became caught in an ingoing nip point on a conveyor belt line in March, resulting in contusions, abrasions, and friction burns.

FEMA Adds a Week to AFG Application Period

Because Hurricane Irene affected so many communities on the East Coast, FEMA extended the deadline. Sept. 16 at 5 p.m. EDT is the new deadline to apply for Assistance to Firefighters Grants.



MSDS Evolution: From Document to Data to Globalization

Some may assume that the lion's share of the responsibility is upstream, but downstream employers are not exempt.

Fall Conference Season in Full Swing

The calendar is full of big meetings from early September to mid-December, including VPPPA, NSC, A+A, the IFMA World Workplace 2011, and NFPA's Fire & Life Safety Conference.

Serious Safety Violations Add Up to $60,900 in Fines for Ohio Firm

Violations include failing to provide machine guards on a bandsaw blade, allowing aluminum dust to collect in the shot blast machine, and failing to implement explosion protection measures for equipment and exhaust ventilation systems.

MSHA Proposes Rule on Proximity Detection Systems

Proximity detection refers to a technology that can be installed on mining machinery to detect the presence of personnel or other machinery within a certain distance.

OHS New Product of the Year Award Winners Announced

Take a look at the entire list of winners of the 2011 New Product of the Year awards.

Construction Fatalities Fell Nearly 10 Percent Last Year

The number of construction fatalities in 2010 was 751, down from 834 in 2009 and 1,239 in 2006.

Laceration, Fire Hazards Add Up to $49,210 in Fines for N.Y. Manufacturer

Eight serious violations involve a storage cabinet for flammable liquids that did not meet fire resistance requirements, an auger that did not have its power source locked out to prevent its activation while employees cleared jams, and blocked and unmounted fire extinguishers.

Worker Fatally Crushed on Oil Rig, Firm Fined $132,300

OSHA's Baton Rouge Area Office began its inspection March 10 following a report that an employee was fatally injured when a land-based portable rig, which was mounted on a barge, tipped over and crushed the employee to death.

Presentations Highlight FRI 2011 Program

This year's Fire-Rescue International conference put on by the International Association of Fire Chiefs gets rolling Aug. 26 at Atlanta's Georgia World Congress Center.

OSHA Slams Texas Construction Firm for Scaffolding Hazards

OSHA cited Roma Construction after an inspection of the company's worksite in San Antonio found employees exposed to scaffolding hazards while applying stucco to the exterior of a home. Proposed penalties total $50,820.

Worker Fatally Struck in Stomach by Debris, Firm Fined $194,400

The willful violations involve a failure to have proper machine lockout/tagout procedures to prevent equipment from unexpectedly starting up and failure to have proper point-of-operation machine guarding in place.

More Research Suggests Dogs Can Smell Cancer

The researchers carried out a number of tests to see if specially trained sniffer dogs were able to reliably identify lung cancer compared with healthy volunteers and volunteers with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and whether the results were still found with the presence of tobacco.

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