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Topics. Media Center. Contact Us. U.S. Department of Labor. Occupational Safety and Health Administration. 200 Constitution Ave NW. Washington, DC 20210. 1-800-321-OSHA. 1-800-321-6742.
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Heat Illness Prevention: Working in the Heat: Know the...
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Heat Illness Prevention: Working in the Heat: Know the Hazards Brochure. Hazard Alert: Hazards Associated with the Release of Liquid Nitrogen and Carbon Dioxide During Flash Freezing Processes. Español: PDF. Recordkeeping: Recordable Injuries and Illnesses: What Workers Need to Know Fact Sheet.
1910.1 - Purpose and scope. 1910.2 - Definitions. 1910.3 - Petitions for the issuance, amendment, or repeal of a standard. 1910.4 - Amendments to this part. 1910.5 - Applicability of standards. 1910.6 - Incorporation by reference. 1910.7 - Definition and requirements for a nationally recognized testing laboratory.
1910-73 History: Division of Labor Standards established in the Department of Labor by departmental order, November 1934. Industrial Division, Children's Bureau transferred to the Division of Labor Standards in the Reorganization Plan No. II of 1946, effective July 16, 1946.
27 kwi 2011 · On April 28, OSHA reaches a 40-year milestone. Since it was founded 4 decades ago, the agency established a range of safety and health regulations to protect the American work force; reduced workplace injuries, illnesses and fatalities; and initiated a national conversation about occupational health and safety.
This content is from the eCFR and is authoritative but unofficial. Displaying title 29, up to date as of 10/23/2024. Title 29 was last amended 10/09/2024. view historical versions. Choosing an item from citations and headings will bring you directly to the content.
Postwar Trends, 1945-1970. The economic boon and associated labor turnover during World War II worsened work safety in nearly all areas of the economy, but after 1945 accidents again declined as long-term forces reasserted themselves (Table 4).