U.S. Orders Bank of America to Pay $930,000 for Illegally Firing Whistleblower

U.S. Orders Bank of America to Pay $930,000 for Illegally Firing Whistleblower

Labor Department officials have ordered Bank of America to pay damages and reinstate a former executive they say was illegally fired for reporting fraud at the company’s Countrywide Financial Corp. unit. The award of $930,000 to former Countrywide vice president Eileen Foster follows a ruling by an administrative law judge that her firing violated whistleblower ... Read more »

Patients Deserve to Know What Drug Companies Pay Their Doctor

Your doctor gives you an expensive new drug to control your cholesterol, or recommends a certain brand of artificial hip, or says you need a stent to open a clogged artery. He’s the expert. But how do you know his expertise is untainted? The makers of the drug, the replacement hip or the stent may ... Read more »

Judgment of Accidental Deaths Outrageous

How much courage does it take to be mean about the dead? Or to scold them for dying accidentally? Two stories in the past week, about three young hikers swept over Yosemite’s Vernal Falls and a Marin man washed into a Hawaiian blowhole by a rogue wave, were grimed up with scathing and indignant comments, ... Read more »

Safety Advocates Seek U.S. Heat Standard to Protect Workers

A petition filed by a consumer watchdog group and its allies is calling on the Occupational Safety and Health Administration to immediately adopt a heat standard to protect workers from harm from extreme heat exposure. The watchdog group, Public Citizen, says that a strong heat standard would prevent many of the deaths and injuries from ... Read more »

A Retail Tactic That is So Not Cool

A Retail Tactic That is So Not Cool

Air pollution, climate change, global competition for scarce energy supplies — all reasons why wasting electricity is a real no-no. But go shopping on a hot summer day, and it’s evident that some people didn’t get the memo.

Escape Tips

Some tips for escaping from a sinking vehicle recommended by Prof. Gordon Giesbrecht and other experts: 1. Brace yourself for impact as soon as you know you’re going into the water. Do this by placing both hands on the steering wheel to prepare for possibility the airbag will inflate. 2. Unbuckle your seatbelt. You will ... Read more »

Activist's Crusade Stalls as Auto Safety Goals Collide FairWarining Reports

Activist’s Crusade Stalls as Auto Safety Goals Collide

In June, 2007, Mary Kay Kidwell’s 17-year-old grandson died while trapped in a car that had plunged into an Indiana lake. The terrible news turned Kidwell into an unlikely activist, determined to prevent the scores of similar drownings that occur in the U.S. every year. Kidwell has lobbied regulators for a window-breaking device to be installed in all vehicles. But in her quest to save people from drowning, Kidwell has run into a competing, long-cherished safety goal: protecting people from being thrown out of their windows during rollover accidents.

Falls From Windows Send 5,000 Kids a Year to Emergency Rooms, Study Says

More than 5,000 children a year are treated in hospital emergency rooms after falling out of windows, a new study shows. The research, published in the journal Pediatrics, found that most of the accidents involved falls from first-floor or second-floor windows of homes, rather than from high-rise apartment buildings. The falls tend to occur in ... Read more »

Hijack Fears Prompt Push for Secondary Barriers on Planes

How long does it take to hijack a plane? Three seconds, says The Atlantic. That’s because pilots or flight attendants open the cockpit door to get to the lavatory, enabling any would-be terrorist to leap from his seat and barge into the cockpit in a matter of seconds. It’s a scenario the Federal Aviation Administration ... Read more »

Tragedy Exposes Holes in Safety Net for Outdoor Concerts

While the multi-billion dollar outdoor concert business enjoys a growth spurt, safety regulators are struggling to keep up with the pace of these elaborate shows, The Associated Press reports. Experts point to Saturday’s accident at the Indiana State Fair, which killed five concert-goers and injured at least 40 others when powerful winds toppled a huge ... Read more »