Photo by Sue Pearsall/ENR The high-profile leaders expressing care at the Safety Week kickoff event included (from left) Lend Lease's Denis Hickey, Limbach's Charlie Bacon and Gilbane's William Gilbane III. Photo by Sue Pearsall/ENR Live Safe Weeks Marine decorated one of its barges, which will be docked next to the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum in Manhattan, to publicize Safety Week. The effort promotes personal safety as well as onsite safety. Related Links: Efforts for Weeklong Safety Drive Include Tour at 95 Express-Lanes Site Safety Week 2015 The grass-roots drive of industry executives to focus the nation's attention on
Related Links: Tenn. Contractor Appeals OSHA Fine, Judge Increases It Floating Batch Plant at New York's Tappan Zee Bridge Partially Collapses Nashville Ready Mix Inc., its president and two related companies face a 24-count indictment charging vehicular homicide and reckless homicide after one of the firm's trucks brakes failed, causing a fatal crash.The charges against Nashville Ready Mix Inc., Nashville Ready Mix of Clarksville LLC, Nashville Ready Mix of West Nashville LLC, and Mark Steven Meadows, president of all three, include operating a commercial vehicle without properly functioning brakes and operating a commercial vehicle that weighed 19,900 lbs over its
Related Links: Link to OSHA rule OSHA Frequently Asked Questions page A long-awaited federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration final rule for working in confined spaces on construction sites has received general support from industry and labor unions, which see the regulation as a positive development that will protect workers.The rule, which OSHA released on May 1 and published in the Federal Register on May 4, establishes new requirements for working safely in confined spaces, such as pits, sewers, crawl spaces and tanks. The rule's requirements take effect on Aug. 3.Assistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health David
Photo Courtesy of Oregon State University School's simulator will evaluate driver and worker actions as vehicles enter work zones. Related Links: Oregon State Y. Driving and Bicycling Simulator MDU Resources Oregon State University is boosting its research efforts in construction and transportation safety with a $1-million industry grant, announced on April 14, that will fund a state-of-the-art laboratory, featuring technology to create virtual jobsites. Making the contribution to the planned lab in the school's College of Engineering are construction-materials firm Knife River Corp. and its sister firm, MDU Construction Services Group. The lab will be named for their parent firm,
An ironworker helping install a green roof on Barclays Center in Brooklyn was killed Feb. 24 when a load of steel joists rolled off a delivery truck and crushed him, says Joe DePlasco, a spokesman for developer Greenland Forest City Partners.Peter Zepft, 52, was acting as a flagman when a delivery truck driver was unstrapping a load of steel trusses in preparation for a crane pick, officials say.The load shifted and one or more joists fell off the truck, striking Zepft, who died at the scene.DePlasco adds that Zepft was an employee of Massachusetts-based James F. Stearns Co., a steel
Photo Courtesy of Terex/Genie Aerial work platforms are expected to grow in China as contractors look for safer working methods at height. Related Links: Rentals Rising in China Overturns and Falls Lead Aerial-Work-Platform Deaths China rang in the New Year with five deadly construction related accidents that left 26 people dead and more than 50 injured. Curiously, the Chinese government last year began tightening laws and implementation systems to reduce accidental deaths in construction sites.The recent accidents included a tunnel collapse, a foundation cave-in, a roof collapse and two cases of scaffolding breaking down.A worried government issued orders on January
Related Links: Sacramento Bee: Chinese firm for Bay Bridge produced flaws in another huge project Fluor Settles With Utilities in U.K. Wind-Farm Construction Dispute Challenges Are Ahead for KBR's New CEO on Board in June Two large global design firms are ending 2014 by announcing major corporate changes that reflect the year's industry trends of rampant consolidation and shifting markets.To bolster its North American presence and global environmental and water infrastructure work, Denmark-based engineer Ramboll Group A/S on Dec. 17 said it acquired Arlington, Va.-based consultant ENVIRON Holdings Inc., which had $294 million in global 2013 environmental, safety and health
Photo by Jeff Rubenstone / ENR Disruption: One of two floating concrete batch plants (above, in a September photo) at the New NY Bridge site partially collapsed on Dec. 16. Related Links: Tight Squeeze: Left Coast Lifter Clears Tappan Zee Bridge New Tappan Zee Bridge Passes Milestone With Pile Cap Installation A barge-mounted concrete batch plant at the new Tappan Zee Bridge jobsite in New York partially collapsed on Dec. 16. Project representatives reported no injuries and say project concrete placement operations have been halted until an investigation is complete.State Thruway Authority engineers and safety experts "are monitoring the situation
Related Links: Collapsed Wall at Tenn. Treatment Plant Was Defective, OSHA Says Demo Crew Member Killed at Gatlinburg, Tenn., Plant Where Two Workers Died Last Year The city of Gatlinburg, Tenn., and the company that runs its wastewater treatment plant have been dismissed from lawsuits stemming from the deaths of two workers when a wall collapsed. However, charges are proceeding against the structure's contractor and engineer and against the plant's contractor and engineer.A jury trial is scheduled for June 2015.John Eslinger, 53, lead operator, and Donald Storey, 44, operator, were killed in April 2011, when the 40-ft equalization-tank wall collapsed
photo courtesy of U.S. Africa Command The U.S. Africa Command is assisting in equipment and personnel support in West Africa. Related Links: U.S. Africa Command website World Bank Ebola Website With the deadly Ebola virus spreading in West Africa—and beyond—global industry firms are helping with relief efforts in the region and coping with impacts on projects. The outbreak, which the World Health Organization says has killed some 4,500 people in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone this year, threatens growth in the region.Earlier this month, Fluor Corp. won a $21-million task order under its U.S. Army Logistics Civil Augmentation Program (LOGCAP