July 2010

You are browsing the archive for July 2010.

House, Senate Pass Aviation Safety Bill That Tightens Rules for Pilots

The Senate has joined the House of Representatives in passing an aviation bill that would mark the first comprehensive effort in decades to revise safety rules for airline pilots. The safety measures in the legislation, The Associated Press reports, would apply to all airlines and address failures that led to the February, 2009, Continental Airlines ... Read more »

Michigan Pipeline Company Was Warned about Corrosion Before Oil Spill

The company that owns the 30-inch pipeline that spilled 1 million gallons of oil into a Michigan river had been warned about insufficient monitoring of pipeline corrosion by federal regulators in January, The New York Times reports. The company, Enbridge Energy Partners, had also received several citations before the January warning. Patrick Daniel, Enbridge’s chief ... Read more »

Illinois Grain Suffocation Deaths Preventable, Officials Say

Federal officials say that a grain bin accident that left two teenagers dead and one adult hospitalized was preventable, had the company followed safety regulations. An emergency crew on Wednesday rushed to a bin owned by Haasbach LLC in northwestern Illinois to free three workers who were buried under hundreds of pounds of shelled corn in ... Read more »

Recall Rundown: Toyota’s Avalon, Frozen Mice, Peppers and More

Toyota Recalls 412,000 Cars in U.S., mostly Avalons Millions of Frozen Mice Nissan Recalls 51,100 Hatchbacks in Canada, U.S. Corn and Poblano Peppers Recalled for Listeria Lead in Paint Prompts Glove Recall

Senators Complain FDA in a Stupor over Alcohol Energy Drinks

More than eight months ago, the Food and Drug Administration asked manufacturers of drinks that combine alcohol and caffeine to prove that their beverages are safe. But the agency has yet to release the results of its investigation publicly, and some members of Congress are losing patience.  U.S. Senators Charles E. Schumer (D-NY), Dianne Feinstein ... Read more »

Calcium Supplements Linked to Heart Attacks in Women With Osteoporosis

Calcium supplements, which often are taken by post-menopausal women to help prevent the bone-thinning disease osteoporosis, might actually hurt patients. New research has found that the supplements increase the risk of heart attack by almost a third, The Los Angeles Times reports. It follows other recent research that questioned whether the supplements reduce the risk ... Read more »

Many Beaches Still Polluted, Environmental Group Finds

Down where it’s wetter, things are not looking better. Water quality at U.S. beaches has shown no significant improvement, with 7 percent of water samples  failing health standards for bacteria in 2007, 2008 and 2009. High bacteria counts often indicate the presence of human or animal waste, and can lead to such illnesses as stomach flu, hepatitis, skin rashes ... Read more »

Crash Tests Set for 55 Vehicle Models Under Tougher Ratings System

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration plans to conduct crash tests on 55 model year 2011 vehicles under its new five-star safety ratings program, the agency said Thursday. The tougher ratings will include information about advanced safety features such as systems that warn drivers when they swerve out of lanes, and will give vehicles a ... Read more »

Environmentalists Sue to Limit “Antibacterial” Chemicals in Soaps, Sanitizers and Other Products

An environmental group is suing the Food and Drug Administration to press the agency to restrict antimicrobial chemicals used widely in soaps, hand sanitizers and a wide range of other consumer products, saying the ingredients undermine antibiotics and disrupt hormone levels. The nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council filed its lawsuit in federal court in New ... Read more »

Michigan Oil Spill May Top 1 Million Gallons, EPA Says

As clean-up efforts continue in the Gulf, officials are scrambling to stop a Michigan oil spill that is believed to be one of the largest ever in the Midwest. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that more than one million gallons of oil may have spilled into the Kalamazoo River, and Governor Jennifer M. Granholm ... Read more »