U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
U.S. Government: Agencies/Departments/Divisions | Federal Agencies
Recent News About U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
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A San Jose, Calif., trucking company must pay more than $145,000 in back wages and damages for violating whistleblower protections in the Surface Transportation Assistance Act.
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US Department of Labor to hold virtual meeting to solicit public input on OSHA whistleblower program improvements
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A Missouri plumbing contractor has again been cited for "willfully" exposing workers to dangerous work conditions, five years after an employee died in an accident in a similar situation.
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The U.S. Department of Labor cited a Sterling, Mass., manufacturer for safety violations after hot liquid plastic burned a worker.
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Nearly five years after an employee died in a trench collapse, a Missouri contractor exposed two workers to the life-threatening risk of being buried by thousands of pounds of soil as they worked in an unprotected trench weakened by water pooling in an excavation site.
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The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration is initiating an enforcement program that identifies employers who failed to submit Form 300A data through the agency’s Injury Tracking Application (ITA)
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Today, Education and Labor Committee Republican Leader Virginia Foxx (R-NC) spoke on the House Floor in opposition to H.R. 6833, the so-called Affordable Insulin Now Act, which would bring our country one step closer to a socialist health care system.
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Education and Labor Committee Republican Leader Virginia Foxx (R-NC) reacted to the Democrats’ introduction of workforce development legislation:
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Despite the findings of a January 2021 federal workplace safety investigation, a Pensacola custom cabinet manufacturer continued to expose workers to fire risks, inspectors with the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration found in a follow-up visit.
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US Department of Labor issues $139K in penalties to address workplace safety deficiencies after six workers injured in flash fire
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US Department of Labor proposes $198K in penalties to Grand Junction foundation repair company for willful, serious trenching safety violations
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The Biden-Harris administration today released the President’s Fiscal Year 2023 Budget and Fiscal Year 2022-2026 Strategic Plan.
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A Smithfield, Rhode Island company could have prevented a worker from suffering fatal head injuries during cement truck repairs on Oct. 21, 2021, an Occupational Safety and Health Administration investigation found.
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US Department of Labor issues $167K in penalties to address workplace safety deficiencies after 29-year-old worker’s electrocution at Clinton TVA
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The U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration has reopened the rulemaking record partially and scheduled an informal public hearing to seek comments on specific topics that relate to the development of a final standard to protect healthcare and healthcare support service workers from workplace exposure to the COVID-19 virus.
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A federal judge has upheld citations and penalties brought by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration against a New Jersey construction contractor.
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US Department of Labor, industry stakeholders to co-host online webinar to help protect construction workers from electrical hazards