Job Opening!- Environmental Health Safety and Security Manager – Central, Illinois

Please Contact Recruiter Directly! I am posting this position as a favor to them!

Our client is a privately held, well known manufacturer of environmental chemical products for the municipal, industrial and air industries. They are consistently growing on a global basis and currently have 5 facilities in North America. They have retained our services to fill an Environmental Health Safety and Security position for their organization. The position will be responsible 3 facilities (2 in Illinois and 1 in North Carolina.

Both are union and non-union); be responsible for day to day operations at the company landfills and wastewater disposal and containment sites; implementation of new and existing health, safety and security programs, policies, procedures and training. What we are looking for is someone who has an engineering or technical background with at least 5 plus years experience in an EHSS role. Experience within a chemical manufacturing facility would be a plus. This position will be based in Central Illinois with relocation assistance being provided.

Lisa K. Sprowls

Vice President

The Filtration Group/Fluid Power Group

Recruiter Solutions International

8850 Tyler Blvd.

Mentor, OH 44060

800-992-3875 Ext. 313

440-205-8280 Ext. 313

www.rsipeople.com

lisa@rsipeople.com

http://www.linkedin.com/in/lisaksprowls

Always available to help with your recruiting needs!

Update! Jimmy John’s Permanently Dropping Sprouts From Menus (Outbreak Linked to Raw Sprouts Sickens 12)

Jimmy John’s Permanently Dropping Sprouts From Menus

Blames The Negative Press

by Dan Flynn | Feb 20, 2012
Or, is the 5th “Sproutbreak” in four years the reason?Jimmy John’s Gourmet Sandwich franchise owners and customers are being told the chain is permanently dropping sprouts from the menu.

Jimmy John’s restaurants are currently associated with a five-state outbreak of the rare O26 strain of E. coli.   It is the fifth outbreak involving sprouts traced back to Jimmy John’s franchises since 2008.
While there has been no public comment by Jimmy John’s since the outbreak was announced Feb. 15,  a Kirkville, MO franchise owner says “Jimmy himself” has ordered all sprouts permanently removed from the menu.
“Jimmy decided he was tired of the negative press from it and he thinks sprouts aren’t necessary for Jimmy John’s to rock,” franchise owner Will Aubuchon told the Daily Express in Kirksville, MO.
And Linda DeGraaf, a Jimmy John’s customer from Omaha who was sickened in the 2009 outbreak, was told by a corporate email that sprouts have been dropped.  ”We no longer serve sprouts because supplies are too inconsistent,” wrote a Jimmy John’s spokeswoman.  http://www.marlerblog.com/legal-cases/the-free-market-actually-works-if-consumers-are-informed—jimmy-johns-to-stop-serving-sprouts/
After a 2010 outbreak,  founder Jimmy John Liautaud switched the sandwich chain to clover sprouts after Salmonella illnesses were associated with alfalfa sprouts.    He thought clover sprout seeds were smoother and would be easier to clean.
Jimmy John’s is not alone among sandwich chains who have decided sprouts are too risky.   The 230-unit Jason’s Deli dropped sprouts for at least the balance of 2012 as a food safety concern.   And the current O26 outbreak prompted the seven state Erbert and Gerbert’s Sandwich Shops to drop sprouts.
Jimmy John’s recent history includes five major outbreaks involving spouts.  Only the latest involves E coli O26.   Briefly here’s the history of each of those incidents, including the latest ongoing event:
2011 – E. coli O26
On Feb. 15, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) announced an ongoing investigation into illnesses linked to consumption of raw clover sprouts at Jimmy John’s restaurants.
Twelve are sickened in five states.  Among the 11 ill persons with information available, 10 (91%) reported eating at a Jimmy John’s sandwich restaurant in the 7 days preceding illness. Ill persons reported eating at 9 different locations of Jimmy John’s restaurants in 4 states in the week before becoming ill.
One Jimmy John’s restaurant location was identified where more than one ill person reported eating in the week before becoming ill. Among the 10 ill persons who reported eating at a Jimmy John’s restaurant location, 8 (80%) reported eating a sandwich containing sprouts, and 9 (90%) reported eating a sandwich containing lettuce.
Currently, no other common grocery stores or restaurants are associated with illnesses. Preliminary traceback information has identified a common lot of clover seeds used to grow clover sprouts served at Jimmy John’s restaurant locations where ill persons ate.
FDA and states conducted a traceback that identified two separate sprouting facilities; both used the same lot of seed to grow clover sprouts served at these Jimmy John’s restaurant locations. On February 10, 2012, the seed supplier initiated notification of sprouting facilities that received this lot of clover seed to stop using it. Investigations are ongoing to identify other locations that may have sold clover sprouts grown from this seed lot.  http://www.cdc.gov/ecoli/2012/O26-02-12/index.html

2010 (Dec) – Salmonella Newport
Sprouters Northwest of Kent, WA, issued a product recall after the company’s clover sprouts had been implicated in an outbreak in Oregon and Washington. At least some of the cases had consumed clover sprouts while at a Jimmy John’s restaurants.  Seven were sickened.

2010 (Dec) – Salmonella I4,[5],12:i:-
A second outbreak involving Jimmy John’s was reported Dec. 17, 2010 by the Illinois Department of Health.   Many of the Illinois cases reported eating alfalfa sprouts at various Jimmy John’s franchises in an outbreak that sickened 140.
Four days later, on Dec. 21, Jimmy John Liautaud asked all of his franchises to remove sprouts from the menu as a “precautionary” measure.
On Dec. 23, the Centers for Disease Control revealed that outbreak cases had been detected in other states and that the outbreak was linked with eating alfalfa sprouts while at a “nationwide sandwich chain.”
 On Dec. 26, preliminary results of the investigation indicated a link to eating Tiny Greens’ Alfalfa Sprouts at Jimmy John’s restaurant outlets. The FDA subsequently advised consumers and restaurants to avoid Tiny Greens Brand Alfalfa Sprouts and Spicy Sprouts produced by Tiny Greens Organic Farm of Urbana, Illinois. Spicy sprouts contained alfalfa, radish and clover sprouts.
On January 14, 2011, it was revealed that the FDA had isolated Salmonella serotype I4, [5], 12:i: – from a water runoff sample collected from Tiny Greens Organic Farm; the Salmonella isolated was indistinguishable from the outbreak strain. The several FDA inspections of the sprout growing facility revealed factors that likely led to contamination of the sprouts.  http://www.cdc.gov/salmonella/i4512i-/122810/index.html
2009 – Salmonella Saintpaul
Jimmy John’s, which the CDC at the time identified at “Restaurant Chain A” was caught up in one of the largest recent sprout-related outbreaks.
A total of 256 were sickened in an outbreak first reported in February by the, Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.  Officials there identified six isolates of Salmonella Saintpaul. Although this is a common strain of Salmonella, in the previous year only three cases had been detected in Nebraska and only four subtypes of this outbreak strain had been identified in the entire USA.
Alfalfa sprout consumption was found in a case study to be significantly related to illness. The initial tracebacks of the sprouts indicated that although various companies had distributed the sprouts, the sprouts from the first cases originated from the same sprouting facility in Omaha.
Forty-two of the illnesses beginning on March 15 were attributed to sprout growing facilities in other states; these facilities had obtained seed from the same seed producer, Caudill Seed Company of Kentucky. The implicated seeds had been sold in many states.
On April 26, the FDA and CDC recommended that consumers not eat raw alfalfa sprouts, including sprout blends containing alfalfa sprouts. In May, FDA alerted sprout growers and retailers that a seed supplier, Caudill Seed Company of Kentucky, was withdrawing all alfalfa seeds with a specific three-digit prefix.
2008 – E coli O157:NM
An outbreak of E. coli O157:NM in Colorado’s Boulder and Adams counties, including the University of Colorado, was linked to the consumption of alfalfa sprouts from Jimmy John’s franchises in the area.
The sickened, including several UC students, experienced symptoms of bloody diarrhea and cramping with O157 determined to be the cause.  A total of 28 illnesses were associated with the outbreak.
In addition, the environmental investigation identified  Jimmy John’s food handlers in Boulder, CO who worked while infected with E. coli. The health department investigation found a number of critical food handling violations, including inadequate hand washing. The fourteen isolates from confirmed cases were a genetic match to one another.  http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/17669936/detail.html

© Food Safety News

More Headlines from Foodborne Illness Outbreaks

—————————————————————————————————————————————

Jimmy John’s ‘most likely’ source

by Mary Rothschild | Feb 15, 2012

Twelve people in fives states have been infected with E. coli O26 in an outbreak linked to raw clover sprouts served at Jimmy John’s sandwich restaurants, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Iowa has reported five cases, Missouri three, Kansas two, while Arkansas and Wisconsin have each reported one person infected with the outbreak strain, the CDC said in an investigation report Wednesday.

Those sickened range in age from 9 to 49 years old. Median age is 25. All the victims are female. Two of the 12 have been hospitalized.

The CDC says the onset of their illnesses ranged from Dec. 25, 2011 to Jan. 15, 2012.

“Preliminary results of the epidemiologic and trace back investigations indicate eating raw clover sprouts at Jimmy John’s restaurants is the likely cause of this outbreak,” the CDC concluded in its report.

Raw sprouts served on sandwiches at Jimmy John’s restaurants have been associated with multiple foodborne illness outbreaks in recent years.

In 2008, at least 19 E. coli O157:H7 cases were linked to alfalfa sprouts sold at Colorado Jimmy John’s restaurants. In 2009, 228 people became ill in Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota and Kansas after eating Salmonella-contaminated sprouts at several restaurants, including Jimmy John’s outlets.

In late 2010, a 16-state Salmonella outbreak that struck 94 people was linked, in part, to alfalfa and spicy sprouts served at Jimmy John’s restaurants, while a separate outbreak of Salmonella a month later, which sickened seven people in Oregon and Washington, was also tied to Jimmy John’s sandwiches.

Following those outbreaks, the company announced it was switching from alfalfa sprouts to clover sprouts nationwide.

In this latest outbreak, there’s strong epidemiologic evidence tying the illnesses to the Jimmy John’s chain.

Among 11 of the ill people who gave information to investigators, 10 — or 91 percent — reported eating at a Jimmy John’s restaurant in the week before they became sick. Among those 10, eight said they ate a sandwich containing sprouts and 9 reported eating a sandwich containing lettuce.

The ill people ate at nine different Jimmy John’s locations in four states, the CDC reported.

A trace back investigation by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) continues, but the CDC said preliminary evidence points to a common lot of clover seeds used to germinate the sprouts served at the Jimmy John’s outlets where the sick people ate.

“FDA and states conducted a trace back that identified two separate sprouting facilities; both used the same lot of seed to grow clover sprouts served at these Jimmy John’s restaurant locations,” the report stated. “On February 10, 2012, the seed supplier initiated notification of sprouting facilities that received this lot of clover seed to stop using it. Investigations are ongoing to identify other locations that may have sold clover sprouts grown from this seed lot.”

At this time, the CDC said no other restaurants or grocery stores are associated with the outbreak.

PulseNet, the national surveillance system of foodborne illnesses, is being used to identify additional cases that might be part of the outbreak.

But the E. coli serotype in this latest outbreak is rare, and the genetic fingerprint pattern has never been seen before in PulseNet, the CDC said. The 026 serotype is among the so-called “Big Six” E. coli strains soon to be regulated in ground beef.

The CDC notes that because non-O157 E. coli strains are more difficult to identify than E. coli O157:H7, many clinical laboratories do not test stool specimens for them and therefore O26 infections may go undiagnosed and unreported.

When Jimmy John’s began serving raw clover sprouts a year ago, it did so saying it hoped to decrease the chances of contamination. Clover seeds are smoother than alfalfa seeds, and presumably easier to sanitize.

Sprouts, which have been the cause of many foodborne epidemics, are considered a high-risk food because they have the potential to carry large amounts of pathogens. If the seeds used to germinate sprouts become contaminated with feces from domestic or wild animals – perhaps through contaminated water or improperly composted manure fertilizer – the sprouts will also be contaminated. The warm, moist conditions used to grow sprouts permit harmful bacteria to rapidly multiply.

Citing food safety concerns, Wal-Mart stopped carrying sprouts in its stores in October 2010. Last month, the national restaurant chain Jason’s Deli announced it would not serve sprouts for the remainder of 2012 and possibly 2013.

Since 2000, sprouts have been linked to 30 foodborne illness outbreaks in North America, Europe and Australia, including last spring’s outbreak of E. coli O104:H4 centered in Germany, which sickened 4,321 people and killed more than 50. That outbreak has been linked to sprouts grown from contaminated fenugreek seeds.

The continued use of raw sprouts in the face of multiple outbreaks has many baffled, including food safety attorney Bill Marler, publisher of Food Safety News. “As a business man I am left wondering why a company would continue to take this kind of financial and public relations risk,” Marler said in a news release. “As a food safety advocate I am concerned that customer safety is not being taken seriously.”

“When people think of sprouts, they think of a health food. They aren’t thinking about serious illness, hospitalization, or worse,” he said. “However, the track record for sprouts suggests that consumers ought to know the dangers. And, of course the onus for providing this information falls on those who are selling sprouts.”

Marler has suggested that sprout growers include a warning label on their product that alerts consumers to the risks associated with consuming raw sprouts.

CDC Outbreak Map:

Fire Prevention News: Weekly Roundup – January 31, 2012

  1. Campaigns / Other Fire Prevention Efforts
  2. Campus Fire Safety
  3. Inspections/Code enforcement
  4. Smoke Alarms
  5. Sprinklers
  6. Wildland Fire Safety
  7. Fire safety tips and reminders
  8. Other Fire Safety News
  9. Smoke Alarm Saves
  10. Sprinkler Saves
  11. International News

Campaigns/ Other Fire Prevention Activities

  1. Fire hazard checks underway – The city has begun an initiative to reduce the risk of home fires in Everett. Under the program, which began earlier this month, the Fire Department‘s prevention unit is traveling through the city’s neighborhoods inspecting residential properties.
  2. Fire prevention workers visit neighbors in effort to educate - David Etienne, from left, a volunteer firefighter and emergency medical technician with the Fairview Fire District, and Will Freer, a fire protection specialist with state Office of Fire Prevention and Control, talk with Marist College students Liz … and more
  3. Tulsa Fire Marshal Tom Recognized For Community Service Hufford works to raise awareness of fire safety by volunteering as an educational clown for the fire department. He performs for children and adults at …
  4. Fire Safety Puppet Show at Martha Washington Library Today – Looking for something to do this weekend? Here are five things to look into. Patch 3. Today will see sunny skies with highs reaching 47 degrees. 4. Today is Bubble Wrap Appreciation Day. Grab some bubble wrap and pop away.
  5. ‘Hard-core’ fire safety: Stamford fire exposes need to plan for emergencies – Steve Waugh, first assistant chief of Easton Volunteer Fire Co. No. 1, presented a fire safety session at the Easton Community Center last Thursday with Lucy Crossman, deputy fire marshal. The event was planned in response to the Christmas fire in …

     


Campus fire safety

  1. College Fires brings safety reminder to UMass Students At the top of the list of things you should do, have a working smoke detector and Amherst Fire Chief Tim Nelson says have an exit plan.
  2. Students don’t often consider fire safety –  When University of Connecticut senior Ryan Tabtabai went in search of an off-campus apartment two years ago, fire safety never crossed his mind. The 21-year-old Shelton native who is planning a career in medicine was most concerned about being on a bus ..
  3. Colleges look at safety in wake of tragic fire Sampson said she prints resource guides for landlords as well as students; holds regular informational sessions about the building code and fire safety for …
  4. 7 Fire Safety Tips for College Students – Three Marist College students died in a house fire on Jan. 21 in Poughkeepsie, NY, a fire that still remans under investigation. The students were living in a privately-owned home, not one affiliated with the college.
  5. UW-L dorm damaged by fire

Inspections / Code enforcement

  1. State, City Officials Meet to Discuss Fire Code –  State and city officials held a private meeting at City Hall this week in an effort to iron out a bitter dispute over which fire code should govern the city’s vintage high rises. The State of Illinois has long contended its fire code should take …
  2. Most older residential towers fail to meet tougher fire standards Years after owners of high-rise buildings were ordered to improve fire safety, more than half of Chicago’s older residential towers have failed to implement …
  3. Chicago officials seek to expedite fire safety updates for high-rises – Check safety status of your building Most older residential towers fail to meet tougher fire standards Story: Most older residential towers fail to meet tougher fire standards
  4. Mass inspections underway for Super Bowl venues “So we can all get out there together and at least during the final inspection we can make sure it meets not only building code but the fire code as well,” …
  5. Officials stress fire safety for businesses –  Brunswick Fire Marshal Jose Juarbe says the most common violations he finds while doing fire inspections of businesses are typically symptoms of a strained economy. “A lot of business owners don’t realize we are trying to prevent fires from happening.
  6. Tulsa warns residents of possible fire department impersonators –  The Tulsa Fire Department is not providing this service or affiliated with a company that does fire hazard home inspections. The impersonator is claiming to be with the Tulsa Fire Department and notifying residents that the Tulsa Fire Department will .
  7. Following building codes correctly saved Canton Legion during fire – The top arrow shows a firewall which divided the building into three compartments to minimize damage in the event of a fire. The lower arrow points out drywall that was installed above the drop ceiling, which also hindered the spread of fire.

Smoke Alarms

  1. Example of how smoke detectors save lives Channel 6 is proud to sponsor the “6abc Save a Life Program,” and with next month being fire safety awareness month, …
  2. Fire Deaths Drop in City — New Smoke Detectors Working Longer
  3. Early warning of fire saves lives - According to state fire officials, most people who die in Maine fires are in a home without a working smoke detector . Most of the fire departments in Maine offer reduced-price or free smoke detectors to residents of their communities ..
  4. Recent fires show off old problem: no smoke alarms The White Hall Fire Department does distribute smoke alarms on a limited basis and conducts fire safety programs to show school children the importance of …

Sprinklers

  1. Homebuilders in Bloomington will be required to offer sprinklers … Stearns added that requiring fire sprinklers in new homes would drive those … of fire sprinkler systems to saving lives and protecting our firefighters.
  2. Home sprinkler rules widened – Newly manufactured homes placed on land in unincorporated Tehama County must have fire-sprinkler systems, the Board of Supervisors decided Tuesday. In a 3-0 vote, the board introduced an …
  3. Bend Fire Urges Fire Sprinkler Freeze Prevention – Building owners, residents, facility managers and building maintenance personnel that have fire sprinkler systems need to know now is the time to take the preventive measures to prevent fire sprinkler systems from freezing.
  4. Tehama County to require sprinklers in mobiles that requires all new conventional homes to install fire sprinkler systems but omits any language including manufactured homes under the law.
  5. Bill to stop sprinkler systems regs may have ripple effect on county –  The issue has been on the minds of El Paso County commissioners for at least a month, when county fire officials came to them for approval of the 2009 International Fire Code, plus amendments that address local needs. A requirement to include sprinkler …
  6. Emmitsburg church to utilize nitrogen to guard against fire Before a fire safety system was required, the church relied on fire extinguishers and volunteer fire companies. “Fire alarm systems were not required 50 …

Wildland Fire Safety

  1. State office approves new fire prevention fee; homeowners in some …- A new fire prevention fee affecting homeowners in some unincorporated areas of the state was approved …
  2. ‘Red Flag’ Fire Warning Issued For Saturday –  Late Friday morning, increasingly warm, dry and gusty conditions across the region prompted the National Weather Service to issue a “red flag” fire-hazard warning, effective from 2 am to 6 pm Saturday.

Safety tips and reminders

  1. 7 Fire Safety Tips for College Students – Three Marist College students died in a house fire on Jan. 21 in Poughkeepsie, NY, a fire that still remans under investigation. The students were living in a privately-owned home, not one affiliated with the college.
  2. Five Ways to Prevent a Mobile Home Fire Earlier this week, a Largo family of four, … 2) Smoke alarms: “Everyone should have one smoke alarm,” Weedin said, …
  3. Millburn fire chief asks: ‘Can you survive a Stamford fire?’ … a “safety professional and spent a lifetime in fire prevention,” according to news articles. I wonder if I have done enough to educate my own family.
  4. Winter Heating Safety Tips – So Takoma Park Police and the Maryland State Fire Marshal offered tips on heating your house safely in the winter. Ensure chimneys are cleaned annually or more frequently if used as the primary heating equipment. Use properly sized fireplace screens or …
  5. Fire department offers safety advice for home heating systems With these statistics in mind, the Brattleboro Fire Department urges … There should be a smoke detector on each level of your home and one in each bedroom …
  6. Heed these lessons of winter fire safety Many Livonia residents, myself included, are now getting tired of the cold weather, snow, dark skies and biting winds. These weather conditions are normal …
  7. Experts show how not to put out a grease fire – Fire prevention officer Rob Marshall said firefighters are all too familiar with grease fires that get out of hand because people instinctively douse the flames with water. “As soon as you put water on it, it explodes,” Marshall said.
  8. Wake Forest Baptist Offers Fire Safety Tips for Home Oxygen Users – The increasing use of home oxygen over the past decade has increased the number of patients suffering from burn injuries that the Burn Center at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center has treated.
  9. Guard against potential winter spike in fire danger for homes Remembering a few fire safety tips can protect you and your home against the dangers of fire during winter months, according to an organization representing …

Other Fire Safety News

  1. Fire fatalities in Ohio reach 25-year low in 2011 “Smoke alarms are proven to save lives,” said State Fire Marshal Larry Flowers … The State Fire Marshal’s Office recommends working smoke alarms on every …
  2. Local cities awarded fire safety grants – Nearly a million dollars in fire safety grants has been awarded to fire departments in two local communities.
  3. County Records Zero Fire Fatalities for 2011 – A multi-pronged effort by field operations, fire prevention , fire and life safety education and the residents of Fairfax County contributed immeasurably to making 2011 a safe and record-breaking year, according to officials.
  4. Fire safety message takes to the road The bright red converted fire engine will be used initially to push the message of Electrical Fire Safety Week, which runs until Sunday, January 29th.
  5. LFD aims for better prevention and less fires in 2012 – The department has also been helping homeowners make homes safer by providing over 409 smoke alarms as well as providing information to children and other families on the importance of safety plans if a fire does occur. “We provide the community a …
  6. How the Apollo 1 Fire Changed Spaceship Design Forever -1967, Virgil ‘Gus’ Grissom, Edward White and Roger Chaffee, the first crew of America’s manned moon program , Apollo, were suited up and strapped inside their new space capsule for a dress rehearsal of their upcoming launch — a mission to fly the …
  7. New Le Mars fire rating could trim costs –  ”We’re doing more classes and more programs, plus income from fire inspections .” Businesses have requested fire extinguisher training classes from the Le Mars Fire-Rescue Department to meet OSHA regulations. There were more than 82 fire extinguisher …
  8. Blazing ahead: City fire departments optimistic about reaching 2012 goals –  The Canton Fire Department hopes to further promote its fire and weather safety house as part of its goals for 2012. Above: Canton Fire Marshal Roger Bailey talks about the safety training program the fire department teaches in ..

Smoke Alarm Saves

  1. Smoke detectors allowed 3 to escape fire
  2. Fire caused by unattended cooking displaces city family of 4 The family was alerted to the fire by a smoke detector about 8:45 pm Saturday in their home at 433 S. 11th St. An unidentified person had been cooking …
  3. Smoke alarm saves woman in Shrewsbury house fire -“Shropshire Fire and Rescue Service along with brigades from all over the UK campaign tirelessly to get people to install smoke alarms in their homes because we know they save lives. They are cheap to buy and easy to install. Just do it.
  4. 2 Escape House Fire In Town Of RoxburyThe woman called 911 after a smoke detector alerted her and her son to the fire. They were both able to safely exit the house but did suffer smoke .
  5. Smoke detector wakes Vancouver woman to fire Not only did a smoke detector save the lives of a grandmother and her grandchild, firefighters say, but it was a detector that Vancouver …
  6. West Chazy couple loses home in blaze The smoke alarm had alerted the West Chazy woman and her husband, Leon, to the middle-of-the-night fire at their 25 Academy St. home. Her husband jumped up, …
  7. Officials say smoke alarm saved grandmother, child

Sprinkler Saves

  1. Sprinklers saved life of Laconia man smoking while on oxygen – r Smoke detectors went off, but didn’t him wake up, he said. The automatic sprinkler system then went off and appeared to have wakened the man. “I would say the sprinklers definitely saved his life. The smoke alarms , even though it was going off, .
  2. Townhouse Fire Stopped By Sprinklers
  3. Sprinkler system knocks down fire in Clackamas County A sprinkler system extinguished a fire that appears to have been intentionally set inside a former Black Angus location in the Oak …
  4. Residential Sprinkler Prevents Potentially Devastating Fire – Leesburg, VA
  5. Sprinklers douse Falmouth apartment fire –  Falmouth Fire Rescue was called to 704 Main St. shortly after 10 pm Tuesday, jan. 24 for a report of a fire in an apartment. Upon arrival, firefighters discovered the building’s sprinkler system was activated by the kitchen fire.

Fire Prevention News: International

  1. Fire safety day a great success in Ribble Valley LANCASHIRE Fire and Rescue Service’s SAFER Day last Saturday was an overwhelming success with nearly 11000 smoke alarms and Home Fire Safety Checks provided …
  2. Fire safety of hundreds of new Alberta houses in doubt New fire-safety bylaws were implemented in Edmonton and Calgary in response to a 2007 fire in the MacEwan neighbourhood of south Edmonton.
  3. Three-point check for fire safety – THE fire service is asking residents to introduce a bedtime check into their daily routine in an effort to reduce house fires. Humberside Fire and Rescue service is promoting three check points to keep people safe from fire by carrying out a bedtime …
  4. London Fire Brigade warns of deaths from ‘beds in sheds’ hidden …In November fire safety inspectors in Brent swooped to close a number of commercial buildings being used as living quarters by around 150 people after …
  5. Firefighter Dave Fanning launches books to spread safety message Now Dave has turned his hand to writing children’s books, as part of a mission to promote his fire safety message. He has created Phil The Fire Engine in a …

EHS-Safety, Fire, Loss Prevention & Risk Professional – Seeking New Opportunity in the Chicago Area.

 

Your friendly Safety Blogger is looking for leads for a full time job, or offers to interview for an opening, in the Chicago area. I wouldn’t normally do this on my Blog, but with twin teen-aged Daughters in high school and my Wife coming home today and letting me know that her job is moving to Indiana from Romeoville, Illinois at the end of June, I need your help! My contract consulting isn’t providing enough hours as a full time job would, and since we just can’t “up and move”, our choices are few.So I truly appreciate your help!

If you are in need of an energetic, hands on, people oriented and money saving safety professional, please contact me. Below is a general synopsis of my background. Please contact me either by leaving a comment to this post or viewing my LinkedIn profile and contacting me there!

THANK YOU for your help!

Jack Benton

Dear Sir or Madam,

I am a dedicated, passionate, results proven, highly successful “hands on” and solutions-oriented EHS & Safety management professional with 10+ years of experience across multiple industries in a single and multiple site setting with an employee base of 500 – 2,000+ employees. I possess a strong background envisioning, implementing, and assessing the efficacy of comprehensive risk, loss prevention, environmental, health and safety programs in full compliance with all applicable local, state, and federal regulations and guidelines.

I have excellent communication and liaison abilities with regulatory agencies and a strong aptitude developing and implementing comprehensive professional development and employee safety education programs. I have exceptional skills in budget administration, staff oversight, resource allocation, and relationship management. I will be an innovative leader adept in leveraging keen strategic vision and solutions orientation to increase staff morale, streamline operations, ensure safety, and perpetuate quality service and support.

I have led and dramatically improved safety performance and reduced employee accident rates in all of my previous endeavors in the manufacturing industry in both a single and a multi-location, union and non-union employee environment. I am extremely successful in collaborating with all levels of organizations to implement safety processes and improve overall performance, providing a positive impact on the overall business success of the company.

I will guarantee success in the development, implementation, use and management of the following programs and others to promote and cultivate a proactive “safety culture”. :

  • CSD – Safety Director Certification. – Graduate 6/30/2008 – Western Iowa Tech College.
  • HACCP FDA Certification – Completed August 2010.
  • Above Average Workers Compensation Cost Reduction.
  • Risk Management & Risk Assessments
  • Highly Successful Employee Injury DART Rate & Injury Reduction.
  • Project Management & Process Safety Management Experience.
  • Accident investigation, management of workers’ compensation cases and OSHA 300 logs management.
  • JHA / JSA conducted on manufacturing processes, equipment, employee job duties to ensure a safe work environment.
  • Work station ergonomic assessment and re-design to minimize or eliminate Repetitive Motion Injuries.
  • Identify, through Labor Metrics, the competencies that are required for each position at each level.  Evaluate employees and design, write and implement the needed training programs.
  • Fleet Safety (100+Vehicles) including DOT, FMCSR, FMCSA, CSA 2010 & HOS Log records retention, drug testing requirements and driver safety program management.
  • Emergency management and employee response team development and implementation.
  • Facility Security Management experience along with use of CCTV, Key Card Access, Fire and Security Alarms.
  • Process Safety, risk management and loss prevention audit and regulatory compliance.
  • Creation, instruction and administration of employee training programs such as MSDS, First Aid /AED, Forklift, DOT, LOTO (lock-out – tag out), Confined Space,  HAZCOM and others as required.
  • Safety Committee creation and administration.
  • Industrial Hygiene Experience Including: Noise and chemical PEL exposure monitoring of employees.
  •  Preparation of yearly safety budgets for departmental programs and PPE.
  • Environmental protection, hazardous waste removal including biohazard materials, Clean Air Act chemical air release reporting (EPCRA) SARA Title 5, storm water (NPDES) permitting program Tier II compliance and SPCC Planning.
  • First aid and AED program implementation, administration and training.
  • Speak fluent English and basic Spanish.
  • Fire protection and prevention plans review, inspections and compliance.
  • Fire, facility security, loss prevention and life safety protection systems, operations and programs.
  • 10 Years of Fire Service Experience as a Lieutenant, Fire Marshal, Public Education Officer, Instructor, Public Information Officer, Fire Investigator and EMT / Firefighter.
  • Familiar with the use and administration of  ISO 9000, 14001, ASQ, SQF, NFPA, BOCA, ICC, ACGIH, OSHA, OSHA VPP, OHSAS 18001, NIOSH, TSCA, NPDES, HACCP, JCAHO, DOT, FMCSA, DOE, CAA, EPA, FDA,NEPA, SARA, Tier II, SPCC, “DuPont Stop Program”, RCRA, State and Local Municipal Government codes, compliance inspections & audits.

I would love to have an opportunity to leverage these and many other competencies as a member of your company’s team. I am available to interview and start a new position immediately.

Please feel free to contact me and I will be happy to send my resume to you. See the “About EHS Safety News” link above for more about me as well!

Sincerely,

Jack Benton

Email: JackBenton1@live.com

OSHA Accuses Illinois Company of Grain Bin Violations in Wisconsin

BLOOMINGTON, Ill.— The U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration has accused an Illinois company of five safety violations at a grain-handling facility in Wisconsin. The agency says in one case the company knowingly disregarded safety laws.

OSHA has proposed fines of $84,000 for Bloomington, Ill.-based Growmark. The company owns the facility in Ixonia, Wis., 25 miles west of Milwaukee.

OSHA says the company knowingly failed to take steps to protect workers before they entered grain bins. Growmark is also accused of failing to provide body harnesses or rescue equipment for work inside bins.

Growmark spokeswoman Amy Bradford told The (Bloomington) Pantagraph that the company is aware of OSHA’s action but otherwise didn’t comment. Growmark operates in 30 states and Canada.

Growmark has 15 days to pay the fines or contest the allegations.

Source: Chicago Tribune

High-Rise Fire Citations Pit City of Chicago Vs. State of Illinois. Should the building where a fatal fire took place have had a sprinkler system? Depends who you ask.

As the state fire marshal cites the owners of a Lake Shore Drive high rise for multiple violations following last week’s fatal fire, a clash is shaping up between the State of Illinois and Chicago over whose fire laws should have applied.

An exploration of the laws shows that confusion reigns, and that in many cases, not everyone agrees on what those laws require.

Illinois Fire Marshall Larry Matkaitis cited the building’s owners, Planned Property Management, for more than a dozen violations, including lack of a sprinkler system, and lack of automatic recall systems on the building’s elevators.

The victim, Shantel McCoy, died when the elevator on which she was riding, opened on the fire floor, hitting her with a blast estimated at 1500 degrees. An automated return system would have locked that elevator down on the building’s first floor when smoke alarms activated, preventing McCoy from ever going upstairs.

Neither sprinklers nor automated return systems are currently required for pre-1975 residential high-rises in Chicago, which claims home rule authority in following its own fire codes, rather than adhering to the more stringent Illinois fire laws. The state contends their law should apply.

“Sprinklers have been required in all high rise residential buildings under State law since 2002,” Matkaitis said in a statement. “The State Fire Code is the minimum fire code that must be met by Illinois municipalities with concurrent jurisdictions, including Chicago.”

It has been an ongoing dispute. When six people died in a fire at County Administration Building at 69 West Washington in 2003, a state report faulted the City of Chicago for failure to follow the stricter state law. That building was not sprinklered, and the report found that the fire likely would have been extinguished in seconds if fire sprinklers had been in use.

“The City of Chicago promulgated a fire code that was less stringent than the requirements of the state fire code,” the report from James Lee Witt and Associates stated. “The City of Chicago should institute an annual review of its Municipal Code, to ensure its compliance with state law and regulations. The City of Chicago should require installation of automatic fire sprinkler systems in high rise buildings.”

But the authors of the report also faulted the state for failure to enforce its own laws.

“The Office of the State Fire Marshal did not effectively inform jurisdictions within the State of Illinois that changes were made to the State Fire Code in January 2002,” the authors wrote. “There is ambiguity within the Office of the State Fire Marshal, regarding the State’s authority to enforce state fire codes within home rule jurisdictions.”

Indeed, on Thursday, when asked about the continuing dispute between Chicago and the State of Illinois, the Chicago Law Department cited Chicago’s home rule powers.

“The city believes that our fire code is as strong, or in a lot of ways, stronger than the state’s code,” said Roderick Drew, a law department spokesman. “Home rule authority gives us the ability to enforce our code.”

Drew added that “both the City of Chicago and State Fire Marshal share the same important goal of ensuring that all buildings have adequate fire safety features.”

Chicago officials insist that in many ways their code is superior to the state’s laws. For example, the Chicago code requires individual apartments to be capable of containing a fire so it doesn’t spread to other units. Plus, they note the state code does not insist on sprinklers in all cases, but rather sprinklers or “an approved engineered life safety system.”

A city official speaking on background, noted that modifications which include either sprinklers or other safety devices is now on the books, and that building owners have been given until 2015 to complete retrofits.

Not all home rule communities share the opinion that following the state code is optional. Peoria, which has both home rule authority and high rises, follows the Illinois Fire Code.

“We don’t soften anything,” said Chief Melanie Anderson, adding that when it comes to sprinklers, “we’re up to snuff on anything that has residential in it.”

Anderson said she was shocked when she learned through news reports that a building resident had ridden an elevator to her death in the Lake Shore Drive high rise.

“When I read that I just cringed,” she said. “That’s not supposed to happen any more.”

Three years ago, Fire Marshal David Foreman wrote a letter to all mayors and managers across Illinois, informing them that they were expected to follow the law.

“The LSC applies to all localities, including home rule units,” Foreman wrote. “It is the responsibility and duty of the local governmental authority to ensure such standards are being followed, or to adopt a code that provides equivalent fire safety.”