Lea Yu

Victims of California Rail Crash That Killed 25 Offered $200 Million Settlement

A Southern California commuter rail system and one of its former contractors have offered to pay $200 million to victims of a 2008 train crash that killed 25 people and injured more than 135, The Los Angeles Times reports. The offer, which comes just months before a trial for damages is set to begin, stands ... Read more »

Feds Issue Blistering Post-Mortem on Deadly Xcel Tunnel Fire in Colorado

The fiery deaths of five workers at a Colorado hydroelectric plant in 2007  might easily have been prevented had Xcel Energy Inc. and one of its contractors followed basic safety rules, federal safety officials say. In a scalding report on the tragedy, the U.S. Chemical Safety Board said Xcel and RPI Coating Inc. didn’t take precautions before using flammable cleaning chemicals in ... Read more »

FDA Eyes Criminal Charges Against Executives

To take a tougher stand against slipshod product safety practices, the Food and Drug Administration is considering bringing criminal charges against senior corporate executives, CNN Money reports. The FDA, according to people familiar with the agency’s thinking, is focusing on executives of companies that have issued recalls due to violations of manufacturing standards. The indications of possible prosecutions ... Read more »

Despite Britain’s Success, U.S. Rejected Salmonella Hen Vaccine

U.S. Food and Drug Administration officials have said the current salmonella outbreak could have been avoided if new egg safety rules, which went into effect in July, had been in place earlier. Industry experts, however, say the new rules still lack a crucial element: salmonella vaccinations for hens. FDA officials have rejected such a requirement, ... Read more »

Patients Want a Bigger Dose of Ethics for Doctors, Poll Finds

Many American consumers believe that doctors are showing too many symptoms of drug company influence, the Consumer Reports National Research Center reports in a new prescription drug survey. The survey — based on a national poll of 1,150 adults who take prescription drugs — found that 69 percent of the respondents say that pharmaceutical companies ... Read more »

Gun Range Cleaner Takes a Bullet From OSHA

A company that cleans gun ranges faces more than $2 million in penalties for allegedly failing to protect its cleanup workers from serious overexposure to lead. Miami-based E.N. Range Inc. violated federal lead standards when it neglected to provide protective clothing, showers or blood testing for employees who were exposed to lead during cleaning operations, according to the U.S. Occupational ... Read more »

Jeep Grand Cherokees Under Investigation Over Fuel Tank Fires

Federal officials have launched an investigation into whether the gas tanks in an estimated three million Jeep Grand Cherokees are vulnerable to fires after a rear impact. The probe follows a petition from the Center for Auto Safety, a consumer group that says the gas-tank design is defective in models released between 1993 and 2004, ... Read more »

SeaWorld Fined $75,000 After Killer Whale Drowns Trainer

Federal authorities are seeking $75,000 in penalties from SeaWorld, including for ”willful” disregard for employee safety, following the death of a trainer in Orlando who was drowned by a six ton killer whale as park visitors looked on. In announcing the sanctions, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration said its investigation of  SeaWorld uncovered an “extensive history of unexpected and potentially dangerous incidents involving killer ... Read more »

Settlement Reached In Deadly 2007 Minnesota Bridge Collapse

A giant engineering and construction company has agreed to pay a $52.4 million settlement in the 2007 Minnesota bridge collapse that killed 13 people in a rush-hour traffic disaster. The settlement by URS Corp. of San Franciso will provide payments to the families of the dead along with 145 others who were hurt in the ... Read more »

Salmonella Scourge Appears Limited to 2 Iowa Egg Farms

The nation’s ever-expanding egg salmonella scare finally may have reached its limits. The Associated Press reports that federal officials have found no evidence of a massive outbreak of salmonella beyond the two Iowa farms already identified as the apparent sources. In addition, Food and Drug Administration officials said they don’t expect the number of eggs ... Read more »