Cwcs Storm Took Fla. Church, Not People s Faith
Every day, an average of 17 people die at work - and 16,000 people are injured.After Ron Hayes son, Patrick, was killed on the job, Hayes founded FIGHT Families in Grief Hold Together . Hayes visited The Early Show to talk about his organization, which assists families of injured workers, and lobbies government and industry to improve workplace safety.Hayes says a lot o
stanley canada f people like to call workplace deaths accidents , but he calls them incidents because 90 percent of these deaths could be prevented. Hayes son was asked to go into a huge grain bin and knock grain off the walls. On that one day, there was a 35-foot flume of corn up on the wall. When he hit it with a pickaxe, it caved in and smothered him.This procedure was called walking down the corn , and was poorly regulated by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration OSHA . As
stanley cup a result of Hayes intense lobbying, he got Congress t
stanley cup o re-write the grain handling standard. Now, in honor of his son, it carries the provision: No one shall walk or stand on grain products, and no one will walk down the corn. The good news is that there is a downward trend in workplace fatalities. In the year 2000, a total of 138 fewer workers died on the job than in 1999. Work-related highway deaths dropped to the lowest point since 1992, and construction-industry deaths declined for the first time since 1996. Historically, workers compensation was considered the exclusive remedy in cases of workplace injury. That mea Vwsu Utah Mine Will Close If Rescue Fails
A Chinese company wants to build this incredible four-square-mile floating underwater city using the same techniques they ;re using for
stanley cups uk the construction of the 31-mile bridge that links Hong Kong, Macau and Zhuhai. It incredible鈥攖he kind of stuff I dreamed about when I was a little kid.
http://gizmodo/c/sploid The China Communications construction company commissioned AT Design Office to plan the ocean metropolis. They are now in talks with a large Chinese investor group to decide whether to pursue the project or not. Of course, some of the parts in the renders would be so prohibitively expensive to make that I doubt that they would make it to the final project but, according to architect Slavomir Siska, the
stanley cup city is entirely doable using the same techniques they are using to build the bridge, which will be finished next year after construction began in 2009: Part of that bridge is an under
stanley quencher water tunnel, which is joined by a 150-metre-long precast concrete box. The mega box is cast on a nearby island and floated to site before being connected. We were appointed to work with the engineer to come up with a masterplan for a 10-square-kilometre floating island that can be built with the same technology. One of the coolest things about this project is that it has underwater and above water levels. SPLOID is a new blog about awesome stuff. Join us on Facebook