Articles Posted in Workers’ Compensation

In a recent interview, Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg made the following comment that has sparked debate about working hours, “I walk out of this office every day at 5:30 so I’m home for dinner with my kids at 6, and interestingly, I’ve been doing that since I had kids. I did that when I was at Google, I did that here, and I would say it’s not until the last year, two years that I’m brave enough to talk about it publicly.”

What’s been startling about Sandberg’s admission, especially for those in the technology field, is that it raises the question: is it OK to work standard hours in today’s competitive marketplace and uncertain economy?

An article on CNN.com delves into this issue and explores other possible biases about working hours, such as balancing home and work life, single workers versus those who have a family, and new technology that allows some workers to continue working even after they come home from the office.

For more information, you can read the full article here.

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Although state and national unemployment rates remain the same, Schuylkill County’s rate decreased 0.5 of a percentage point to 8.5 percent in February, the lowest it has been since January 2009.

According to an article on the RepublicanHerald.com, a seasonal decline was seen in February in industries such as retail trade as seasonal workers were laid off, and leisure and hospitality jobs, as winter activities and holiday traveling ended.

The article also noted that trade, transportation and utility jobs increased, including professional and business services. Mining, logging and construction was up compared to last year.

As the story continues to unfold, employees of Saint Catherine Medical Center are becoming frustrated with the lack of information about the future of the facility, according to an article on the RepublicanHerald.com.

Yesterday the hospital filed for bankruptcy under Chapter 11. Today the facility’s owner, Robert M. Lane, held a meeting with employees, but many walked away without much information. After the meeting, representatives from the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees were on hand to help Saint Catherine workers fill out paperwork.

In the article, some employees mentioned a number of problems at the facility, including deductions like union dues being taken from employee paychecks but not forwarded to the union, not receiving paychecks on time, and ongoing shortage of supplies at the hospital.

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The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration has cited Tsudis Chocolate Co. for two repeat and 14 serious safety violations at its Pittsburgh candy manufacturing facility.

According to a news release, OSHA opened an inspection after a worker sustained head injuries while setting up operations on a machine that started up inadvertently.

The news release stated the injury was caused when a machine was not locked to prevent accidental start up.

On March 28, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration issued a request for information seeking comments on how to prevent injuries and deaths from reinforcing concrete activities in construction and from vehicles and mobile equipment backing into workers in construction, general industry, agriculture and the maritime industry. According to workerscompensation.com, OSHA will use the comments received to learn more about how workers get injured and what solutions exist to prevent such injuries and deaths, including possible regulatory action.

Workers using reinforcing methods to strengthen concrete face potential life-threatening hazards including impalement, collapsed walls, and slips and falls.

According to OSHA more than 30 workers died from these activities from 2000 to 2009.

According to an article on InsuranceNewsNet.com, the borough of Nazareth, PA will need to look for a new insurance company for their workers’ comp policy. This is due to excessive claims totaling nearly $1.1 million from 2009 to 2012.

The article said that Nazareth Mayor Fred Daugherty explained that 98% of the workers’ comp claims during that period were from police department personnel.

“Travelers was the only company that would provide us a workers’ compensation policy. Our only option now is to go to the state fund, and we can’t even get a figure on that yet,” said Mayor Daugherty. However, he did not go into detail regarding what has caused the rise in claims.

We were saddened to read the news in last week’s Republican Herald about potential financial problems at St. Catherine’s Medical Center in Fountain Springs. A series of mandatory meetings with employees were held by the administration at the end of last week. In the article, Merlyn E. Knapp, president/CEO of St. Catherine’s, is quoted as saying, “The message to our employees this morning was stay calm, work with us and give us some time to resolve these difficult issues.”

The article reported that several workers who were leaving the meetings complained that some employees were getting their paychecks late. They were told that “some people didn’t get paid because their (hospital) bank account was frozen.” Although the last payday was Fri., March 16, many employees did not receive their checks until Monday and Wednesday of last week.

The employees also told the paper that they sometimes find themselves short on supplies. One employee is quoted as saying, “In general, it’s in every department where they’re short of items.”

Despite these issues, Knapp is quoted in the article as saying that there are no layoffs “at this time.”

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A Wilkes-Barre man is dead after an industrial accident at the Proctor & Gamble plant in Wyoming County Saturday.

According to WNEP, Jason Slavish, 36, was injured while the plant was down for maintenance and that Slavish was injured during repair work on a paper machine and died of head trauma later that day in a local hospital.

P&G officials said Slavish was a 14-year employee and the plant has not had a deadly incident in decades.

Shell Oil recently announced a land-option agreement with Horsehead Corporation to evaluate a Beaver County site for a potential petrochemical complex, including an ethane cracker facility, according to a news release issued by Pa. Gov. Tom Corbett’s office.

Corbett said in the release that the Shell plant, if constructed, has the potential to be “the single largest industrial investment in the region in at least a generation.”

A study by the American Chemistry Council estimated that more than 10,000 new permanent jobs would be created as a result of the facility locating to the region and Shell expects 10,000 construction jobs will result from site development.

A new study by the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition has linked employee burnout to overeating, according to an article on CNN.com.

The study involved 230 working women. Even after 12 months, those who were experiencing workplace burnout at the beginning of the study were more likely to have emotional and uncontrolled eating habits than those without burnout.

The study found that body mass index was often associated with uncontrolled eating and that overweight individuals were more likely to engage in these behaviors. But the study found that there was no significant difference in weight between people with and without burnout.

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