American aviation authorities have cleared the airline to add more flights to the United States after safety standards improved.
Responding to the Lac-Megantic disater, the Federal Railroad Administration announces it will issue a proposed rule regarding crew size on crude oil trains.
The board recommended that FAA assume oversight of sightseeing balloon operators, in the same way that it oversees airplane and helicopter tour operators.
The company faces $185,400 in proposed fines for alleged willful and repeat violations.
The World Steel Association and its members, which represent about 85 percent of the world's steel production, will carry out an industrywide safety audit.
Sutter Davis Hospital's accomplishments include no post-operative orthopedic surgical infections from 2008 through 2012, no catheter-associated urinary tract infections since 2008, and no central-line-associated bloodstream infections since 2010.
The screenings begin in seven states this month.
Burrows Paper Corp. faces nearly $300,000 in proposed fines.
The ministry announced it has spent more than $1.8 million on a robotic mannequin to test protective suits and equipment for Britain's armed forces.
The chief reasons installed alarms fail to operate are missing, disconnected, or dead batteries.
Since mid-World War II, nearly 50 percent of combat deaths have been due to bleeding out. Half of those likely could have been saved if timely and appropriate care had been available.
A jury in Louisiana also awarded $1.475 million in compensatory damages. This is the first federal case to be tried and the first in the consolidated multidistrict litigation involving Actos, a diabetes drug the companies co-promoted from 1999 to 2006.
The product was recalled because of "foreign matter" contamination.
The page offers information related to chronic diseases that accompany aging.
The public and stakeholders also have 30 days in which to comment about the NPRM issued in June 2013.