While employers remain committed to offering health and productivity programs, they are frustrated by the inability of many workers to change their health habits, according to a survey conducted by Towers Watson (NYSE, NASDAQ: TW), a global professional services company, and the National Business Group on Health (NBGH), a nonprofit association of large U.S. employers.
OSHA has cited TransPecos Foods in Pecos for alleged workplace safety and health violations following an inspection at the company's facility on East Palmer Road. Proposed penalties total $69,650.
OSHA has cited Ohio Decorative Products, a die cast metal products manufacturer in Spencerville, with $91,000 in proposed penalties for workplace safety violations.
Mark Griffon’s career has included work in academia, the public sector and the private sector. He started his career in the private sector as a project manager for Chemical Waste Management and then worked in the Work Environment Department at the University of Massachusetts Lowell to develop and deliver Hazardous Waste Training, Radiation Worker Training, and Toxics Use Reduction planning curricula. While working for the University’s Toxics Use Reduction Institute, he also headed an effort to conduct industry-specific planning workshops with metal working companies, electronics companies, chemical and plastics industries and paper and textile manufacturers.
John Bresland, chairman of the Chemical Safety Board (CSB) issued the following press statement yesterday on the 5th anniversary of the fatal explosion at the BP Texas City refinery.
Today, five years after the terrible explosion at BP's Texas City refinery, Secretary of Labor Hilda L. Solis issued the following press statement remembering the 15 workers who were killed and the many others who were injured in that tragic event:
A significant new rule from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency dealing with lead-safe work practices goes into effect on April 22, 2010, according to an EPA press release.
Wyoming Governor Dave Freudenthal recently signed legislation requiring all cigarettes sold in Wyoming to meet a specific fire safety standard as of July, 2011. This marks the 50th state to pass legislation aimed at reducing the number of cigarette fires and fire fatalities, according to a press release from the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA).