Omaha, NE (WorkersCompensation.com) - After four preventable work-related deaths since March 9, 2016, the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and Health Administration is urging Husker state employers to carefully review safety and health programs, and their procedures to stem the tragic tide.
While investigators in the agency's Omaha Area Office prepare their findings, the office is also offering compliance assistance, tips and other information to employers and workers on common workplace safety hazards and how to prevent illness and injury.
"Employers and workers alike can prevent job-related injury and death with simple, common sense safety procedures," said Jeff Funke, OSHA's area director in Omaha. "With spring now upon us, construction and other seasonable work will soon be in full swing. Once again, workers will be exposed to some of the most frequently cited OSHA hazards such as falls, struck-by, and trenching - three of the hazards suspected in the most recent fatalities."
OSHA's Omaha office is currently investigating the following workplace deaths:
So far in 2016, four work-related deaths have been reported in Nebraska. In 2015, 12 workers died on the job in the state.
Additionally, OSHA has also opened 41 investigations since Jan. 1, 2016, 32 incidents were hospitalizations and nine were due to amputations. Last year, 162 severe Nebraska worker injuries were reported* to OSHA, 113 of those required hospitalization and 52 involved amputation injuries.
Since Jan. 1, 2015, OSHA requires employers to report any severe work-related injury - defined as a hospitalization, amputation or loss of an eye - within 24 hours. The requirement that an employer report a workplace fatality within eight hours remains in force. In the first full year of the program, employers nationwide reported 10,388 severe injuries, including 7,636 hospitalizations and 2,644 amputations.
"The prompt reporting of worker injuries has created opportunities for us to work with employers to develop safer workplaces," Funke said. "When employers, workers, unions and safety professionals from OSHA work together we can ensure better working conditions and safety training for all Nebraskans and prevent debilitating injuries, illness and death that cost our economy and families untold sums."
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