Activist named to workplace accident panel
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.
From the Record, February 24, 2015
Rick Engler, who brought together an unlikely alliance of union groups and environmentalists to push for public access to information on dangerous chemicals used in factories in New Jersey, has been named by President Obama to a federal board that investigates major workplace accidents.
Engler, a Glen Rock resident and head of the New Jersey Work Environment Council, will serve a five-year term on the U.S. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board. The board does not have regulatory authority, but it provides key recommendations to improve worker safety as well as the safety of residents who live near high-risk industrial sites.
Just last month the five-member board cited a 2012 fire that burned workers at the US Ink facility in East Rutherford as an example of the need for comprehensive rules to make manufacturing plants safer. The board is modeled after the National Transportation Safety Board, which investigates rail, air and other transportation accidents.