Texas Wire Drawing Company Faces OSHA Fines After Fatal Fall
WMC San Antonio has been issued $299,339 in proposed penalties and citations alleging two willful violations after a worker died in a fall, the Labor Department said Monday.
WMC San Antonio has been issued $299,339 in proposed penalties and citations alleging two willful violations after a worker died in a fall, the Labor Department said Monday.
Tyler Pipe Co. faces a US Labor Department lawsuit alleging violations of federal whistleblower protections after allegedly firing an employee who requested personal protective equipment, the DOL said Monday.
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Dixon Ticonderoga Co. has been issued a $203,806 proposed penalty for allegations of two repeat and four serious violations after an inspection into an employee’s amputation injury in Neenah, Wis. found the companiy again failed to follow adequate machine safety procedures, the Labor Department said Friday.
Buzzi Unicem USA has been issued $62,500 in proposed penalties and citations alleging five serious violations related to an employee drowning after falling off a barge into the Mississippi River, the Labor Department said Thursday.
The Washington State Department of Labor & Industries has issued a fine of $85,800 to Amazon.com Inc. for allegedly exposing workers to unsafe conditions at a fulfillment center in Spokane, according to a Wednesday statement.
A south Arkansas timberland and sawmill facility faces $218,759 in proposed penalties and has been cited with four serious violations after a 39-year-old employee was fatally injured at the company’s Bearden location, the Labor Department said Wednesday.
Avila’s Roofing has been issued citations alleging two willful and two serious safety violations and one other-than-serious violation, as well as $323,143 in proposed penalties for fall hazards in Pennsylvania, the Labor Department said Wednesday.
Deborah Misir has joined Cullen and Dykman as a partner in its commercial litigation department, the firm said Wednesday.
Doctors at private hospitals are turning to unions to address the loss of autonomy and deterioration of working conditions that they believe are the result of increasing health-care mergers and acquisitions in the wake of post-pandemic economic strains on the industry.
As employers are making plans to return to their workplaces. How quickly they succeed will likely depend on how many of their employees get vaccinated.
Employer contests a four-item serious citation in 11 parts and $53,976 fine. The serious citation includes the alleged violation of 29.C.F.R. 1910.134(c)(1), for failure to establish and implement a written respiratory protection program with worksite-specific procedures; 29.C.F.R. 1910.134(e)(1), for failure to provide a medical evaluation to determine an employee’s ability to use a respirator before the employee was required to use the respirator in the workplace; and 29.C.F.R. 1910.134(f)(2), for failure to ensure that an employee using a tight-fitting face-piece respirator was fit tested prior to initial use of the respirator. (20-0329)
Employer contests a three-item serious citation and $6,998 fine and a repeat citation and $8,906 fine. The serious citation includes the alleged violation of 29.C.F.R. 1926.102(a)(1), for failure to ensure that eye and face protective equipment was used when machines or operations presented potential eye or face injury; 29.C.F.R. 1926.1053(b)(1), for failure to secure portable ladders used to access an upper landing surface against displacement; and 29.C.F.R. 1926.1053(b)(13), for failure to ensure that the top step of a stepladder was not used as a step. (20-0330)
Employer contests a two-item serious citation and $12,337 fine and a two-item other-than-serious citation with no fine. The serious citation includes the alleged violation of 29.C.F.R. 1910.36(d)(1), for failure to ensure that employees were able to open exit route doors from the inside at all times without keys, tools, or special knowledge; and 29.C.F.R. 1910.178(l)(4)(iii), for failure to conduct an evaluation of each powered industrial truck operator performance at least once every three years. The other-than-serious citation includes the alleged violation of 29.C.F.R. 1910.157(e)(3), for failure to perform annual maintenance checks on fire extinguishers. (20-0317)
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