Labor

Alaska bill aimed at lowering the ages for alcohol-servers and restaurant workers

Juneau, AK — Legislation that would allow workers as young as 18 to serve alcohol, as well as teens and 20-year-olds to work in restaurants that serve alcohol, is advancing in the Alaska Legislature.

PPE fit challenges in construction: new resource

Silver Spring, MD — CPWR – The Center for Construction Research and Training has compiled a list of providers of appropriate-fitting personal protective equipment for female, nonbinary and transgender workers.

House Dems want answers on info scrubbed from OSHA’s website, reported document destruction

Washington — Two House Democrats are raising strong concerns about OSHA’s removal of information from its website and the reported destruction of physical copies of agency documents.

Trump picks Wayne Palmer to lead MSHA

Washington — President Donald Trump has nominated Wayne Palmer to lead the Mine Safety and Health Administration.
- Digital Partners -

Trump taps former UPS, Amazon exec David Keeling to lead OSHA

Washington — President Donald Trump has nominated former UPS and Amazon safety executive David Keeling to lead OSHA.

OSHA withdraws COVID-19 reporting and recordkeeping requirements

Washington — OSHA is no longer enforcing its COVID-19 recordkeeping and reporting requirements, the agency announced in a Feb. 5 memo.

Higher expectations for MLB pitchers’ ‘stuff’ leading to pre-season injuries: report

New York — Pitchers traditionally report to Major League Baseball spring training camps by mid-February to ramp up throwing programs. But a recent MLB report shows that overwork during the offseason is making today’s pitchers more likely to get injured before the regular season even starts.

Fentanyl being added to drug testing programs for federal workers

Washington — The Department of Health and Human Services is including fentanyl in its drug testing panels for federal workplace programs.
- Digital Partners -

Unions don’t have standing to block DOGE’s access to DOL data, federal judge rules

Washington — A federal judge has denied a motion, filed by a group of labor unions, to stop the Department of Government Efficiency from accessing nonpublic Department of Labor information and data.

Ethylene oxide exposure: EPA aims to protect workers, lower emissions

Washington — The Environmental Protection Agency is taking several actions, including a partial ban, to protect workers against exposure to ethylene oxide, under a new interim registration review decision.

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