Now Playing
Most Active Stories
- Growing sagebrush and other native seed: Crackpot idea or lucrative business venture?
- Wyoming missed out on last uranium boom, but planning for the future
- South Africans strive to limit damage to landscape as elephant populations grow
- Wolf trapping raises concerns about trapping the wrong animals
- Study finds BLM’s wild horse management practices are flawed
On Air Staff and WPM Interns
Podcasts & RSS Feeds
| All Content |
| RSS |
| View all podcasts & RSS feeds | ||
Connect with Us
News
7:36 am
Mon February 27, 2012
Bill would encourage companies to make workplaces safer
A measure intended to increase workplace safety is making its way through the Wyoming House of Representatives. The bill is intended to encourage companies to contact OSHA to determine if they're doing what they can to ensure workplace safety. Grants will be provided to help companies implement safety programs and buy necessary equipment. Cheyenne Democrat Mary Throne had wanted stiffer penalties to ensure compliance, but she is hopeful that this approach will work. “I certainly think we need to provide more resources to employers and to OSHA to help those folks who want to engage in the consultation process," Throne said. "And hopefully it will work and if it does, maybe I am wrong about the need for higher penalties. If it doesn’t, then I really think we need to look at the enforcement side of the equation.” Wyoming ranked among the top two in the nation in workplace fatalities in eight of the last nine years.
