Lead Spikes in DTE Staff Trigger State Citation

State Cites DTE After Workers Show Elevated Lead Levels

  • Michigan workplace safety officials issued a serious citation and $4,200 in fines after several DTE Energy employees recorded elevated blood lead levels. 
  • Inspectors found readings between 19 and 34 µg/dL, exceeding state thresholds for removal from lead‑related duties. 
  • MIOSHA’s review focused on soldering and cable‑splicing tasks that may have contributed to exposure. 
  • The agency’s findings came from inspection records obtained by MLive.

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Debate Over Chemical Safety Oversight Intensifies

  • A Bloomberg Law report outlines a dispute over whether EPA or OSHA should take primary responsibility for regulating hazardous chemical exposures in workplaces. 
  • The debate stems from 2016 TSCA amendments requiring EPA to evaluate commercial chemicals’ risks to workers. 
  • Industry groups argue TSCA already directs EPA to defer to OSHA when appropriate, while labor groups say EPA must regulate when OSHA standards fall short.
  • Lawsuits and draft legislation offer competing approaches to clarifying the agencies’ shared authority.

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Budget Bill Raises OSHA Penalty Limits

  • A federal budget bill includes a provision that increases OSHA fines for workplace safety violations for the first time in 25 years. 
  • The measure adjusts penalties to reflect inflation since 1990 and requires future increases to track inflation. 
  • Maximum fines for severe violations could rise from $70,000 to about $125,000. 
  • OSHA will determine the final percentage increase by mid‑2016.

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