March 5, 2015

OSHA News Brief: Worker fatally pinned by forklift at Menards warehouse [03/05/2015]

Employer name: Menards Inc., 4777 Menard Drive, Eau Claire, Wisconsin

Investigation site: Menards Inc., operating as Midwest Manufacturing, 4801 N. 264th Street, Valley, Nebraska

On Sept. 29, 2014, the U. S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration's Omaha Area Office initiated a fatality inspection after a 54-year-old forklift operator was fatally injured while moving trusses in a warehouse owned by home improvement store, Menards Inc.

March 5, 2015

OSHA News Release: Blast badly injures 2 at Chicago Heights, Illinois, manufacturing plant [03/05/2015]

CHICAGO HEIGHTS, Ill. — Two temporary workers injured in an explosion at Polychem Services Inc., were unable to return to work for months after being hospitalized with first and second-degree burns after their work site was ignited by a gas-powered forklift.

March 5, 2015

OSHA News Release: Jasper Contractors continues to put roofing workers lives in jeopardy [03/05/2015]

JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Since 2013, 294 workers have been killed by falls: a deadly fact that one roofing contractor appears willing to ignore as it was found putting the safety of its employees at risk by U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health inspectors once again.

March 4, 2015

OSHA News Brief: OSHA co-sponsors worker safety and health conference with Sauk Valley Community College, March 10, in Dixon, Illinois [03/04/2015]

Who: Aurora Office of the Occupational Safety and Health AdministrationSauk Valley Community College

What: OSHA Safety Day Training Conference

When: Tuesday, March 10, 7:30 a.m. – 3 p.m. CST

Where: Sauk Valley Community College 173 Illinois Route 2 Dixon, IL

March 4, 2015

OSHA News Release: US Labor Department sues Idaho Falls school district after employee is fired for raising concerns about asbestos removal [03/04/2015]

SEATTLE — When an employee raises concerns about the dangers of asbestos in a school, you would expect them to be commended and not terminated. After questioning whether the timeline of a construction project at a school in Idaho Falls School District 91 allowed for safe removal of asbestos, a district employee was out of a job. Now, the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has stepped in to protect that worker's rights.

March 4, 2015

OSHA News Release: Core-Mark International must reinstate, pay more than $230K to employee fired for voicing driver safety concerns [03/04/2015]

PHOENIX — An employee who raised concerns that a truck driver employed by Core-Mark International of Phoenix had exceeded the legally allowed maximum number of driving hours must be reinstated immediately and paid more than $230,000 in back wages and compensatory damages, the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has ordered.

March 3, 2015

WHD News Release: US Labor Department enforcement initiative finds widespread minimum wage and overtime violations in Dallas-area hotel industry [03/03/2015]

DALLAS — Living on the minimum wage is tough enough when workers are paid for all hours worked and harder still for employees who work off the clock and are not paid fully for their labor. Unpaid wages leave workers and their families to confront difficult choices, like buying medicine for a sick child or purchasing food.

March 3, 2015

WHD News Release: Westin Kierland Resort pays more than $76K in back wages, penalties [03/03/2015]

Employer underpays staff, denies employment to qualified domestic workers

March 3, 2015

WHD News Release: Drywall contractor owes 'tapers' more than $98K in back wages [03/03/2015]

PR Drywall of Hillsboro, Oregon, underpays 7 workers in wages and overtime

March 3, 2015

WHD News Brief: Mobile testing device employer pays more than $266,000 to 118 employees following US Labor Department investigations in Texas and Washington [03/03/2015]

Employer: Device Inside Inc., which provides mobile device testing and other related services for Samsung.

Site: Corporate office in Dallas, Texas and a branch office in Bellevue, Washington

March 3, 2015

OSHA News Brief: Auburn, Alabama contractor exposes workers to cave-in hazards; fails to use safety measures to prevent excavation collapse [03/03/2015]

Employer name: D&J Enterprises, Inc.

Inspection site: 2151 Interstate Drive Opelika, Alabama 36801

Date inspection initiated: The Occupational Safety and Health Administration initiated the Jan. 14, 2015 inspection as part of the agency's National Emphasis Program on Trenching and Excavation.

March 3, 2015

OSHA News Brief: Blocked exits, electrical hazards found after worker electrocuted at distribution warehouse in Dayton, N.J. [03/03/2015]

Employer name and location: Seldat Distribution Inc., 15 Thatcher Road, Dayton, New Jersey.

Date investigation initiated: The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration initiated an investigation on Sept. 11, 2014, in response to a referral from the South Brunswick Fire Marshall reporting that an employee was electrocuted by an improperly wired, powered conveyer system.

March 3, 2015

OSHA News Brief: OSHA cites Toledo Refining Company following September fire [03/03/2015]

Employer name: Toledo Refining Company LLC

Investigation site: 1819 Woodville Road, Oregon, Ohio

Date investigation initiated and what prompted inspection: On Sept. 2, 2014, the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration's Toledo Area Office initiated an inspection of the petroleum refinery after a fire occurred in a heater at the facility, used to process crude oil. The refinery sustained some minor damage but no injuries were reported.

March 3, 2015

OSHA News Release: Bronx hair salon fired employee who warned co-workers of formaldehyde hazards, suit alleges [03/03/2015]

NEW YORK — All a receptionist at Salon Zoë hair salon wanted to do was make her fellow employees aware of health hazards associated with products containing formaldehyde that were regularly used by haircutters and stylists at the business in the Riverdale section of the Bronx. Her employer responded by firing her.

March 3, 2015

OSHA News Release: Untrained worker suffers fatal electrocution at H.M. Richards Inc. [03/03/2015]

GUNTOWN, Miss. — Raymond Marvin Reece was a husband and father who enjoyed pleasures like family boating trips, camping and stock-car racing. Tragically, the 46-year-old maintenance worker at H.M. Richards Inc. was fatally electrocuted on Oct. 1, 2014, as he disconnected wiring on a saw at the company's temporary facility on Towery Road in Guntown.

March 2, 2015

OSHA News Brief: OSHA cites Affordable Exteriors for 7th time in 10 years for failing to provide fall protection to roofers [03/02/2015]

Company has failed to address previously issued OSHA citations, pay penalties

Employer name: Affordable Exteriors Inc., 17118 Harney Street, Omaha, Nebraska

Investigation site: 20505 Taylor Street, Elkhorn, Nebraska

March 2, 2015

OSHA News Release: OSHA fines US Minerals more than $113K for repeatedly exposing workers to dangerous machinery, falls and chemical hazards [03/02/2015]

ROBERTS, Wis. — Two years after pledging to address health and safety violations in a corporate settlement agreement after workers were exposed to serious machine, fall and respiratory hazards at its facilities around the country, U.S. Minerals Inc. employees in Roberts were faced with the same hazards, a September 2014 U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration inspection found.

March 2, 2015

OSHA News Release: Court bans Mike Neri Sewer and Water Contractor from excavating work [03/02/2015]

Elk Grove Village, Illinois-based contractor refuses to abide by OSHA standards

March 2, 2015

OSHA News Release: Employees avert explosion, fire and other dangers after solvent spill at freight terminal exposes employer's lack of readiness [03/02/2015]

BRIDGEPORT, Conn. — Employees at a Wallingford freight shipping terminal faced dangerous chemical, fire and explosion hazards on Oct. 6, 2014, as they tried to contain a highly flammable and explosive chemical spill without proper training and personal protective equipment, U.S. Department of Labor Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigators have determined.