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0 +1How to Find a House That Caters to Your Disability
Finding a home that works with your disability can be daunting. Maybe it's wider halls and doorways, lower counters, handrails or ramps, searching through all the listings can be overwhelming. It really pays to have an agent that is familiar with these homes to do the searching for you.
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+21 +1Disneyland Temporarily Closes Space Mountain After Man 'Utilized Force' to Climb Out Mid-ride
Disneyland had to temporarily close one of its most popular attractions, Space Mountain, this week after a man climbed out of one of the roller coaster cars while the ride was still in motion, ABC News reported. The incident happened on Tuesday, but unfortunately, Disneyland park-goers were still unable to ride the indoor roller coaster as of Thursday.
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+12 +1USB Type-C Authentication Program launched to protect your devices
With the arrival of USB-C a few years back, plugging into laptops, tablets and smartphones became even easier than before. But there are potential security risks. The USB Type-C Authentication Program launched today aims to address such issues.
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+1 +1Awaken The New Year 2019
Written by Dr. Perry, PhD Image Credit: Pixabay “I wake to sleep, and take my waking slow. I feel my fate in what I cannot fear. I learn by going where I have to go.” ~Theodore Roethke …
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+12 +1Bangladesh clothing factories face squeeze if safety push blocked
A group set up to improve safety in Bangladesh's garment industry after the...
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+11 +12019 Ram 1500 Aces Crash Tests, Stymied by Headlights
You win some, you lose some. For Fiat Chrysler, the new Ram 1500 represents more of a win, both in terms of quality, drive experience, and especially crash ratings, which just rolled in from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety. The previous-generation 1500 lost marks in two areas: driver-side small-overlap front impacts (a weakness it shares with FCA’s rear-drive passenger cars) and roof strength. Both of these tests earned the 2018 1500 a “marginal” rating from the IIHS, sinking its overall score.
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+4 +1How to climb a ladder
Use three-point control for climbing ladders. When it comes to ladder safety, there’s a difference between three-point control and the traditional three-point contact rule. Three-point control is a climbing method that involves always using three or four limbs distributed over three or four locations for reliable support. Three-point contact involves simply coming into contact with the ladder at three points without necessarily requiring a reliable hand grip for support.
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+1 +1Firm That Owned Limo in Deadly Crash Repeatedly Failed Inspections
The driver of the vehicle also did not have a proper license, according to state officials and federal transportation records.
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+12 +1Self-Driving Car Developers Should Put Pedestrians First
Since March, when an autonomous vehicle killed a pedestrian in Arizona, forecasts for AVs have been decidedly less optimistic. But autonomous vehicle promoters are undeterred. AI entrepreneur Andrew Ng contends that self-driving cars will be safe for pedestrians when walkers and cyclists conform to their limitations. “What we tell people is, ‘Please be lawful and please be considerate,’” he told Bloomberg.
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+11 +1Too many Americans die on the job. Are things about to get worse?
Who remembers Alphonse Maddin? Maddin came briefly to national attention in spring of 2017, after Donald Trump appointed Neil Gorsuch to the supreme court. Maddin was a truck driver and the central character in one of Gorsuch’s worst opinions as a circuit court judge. His story is one of the rare prominent examples of a vast, hidden world of American injustice: danger in the workplace.
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+3 +1As US Rules for Asbestos Are Sidestepped, a Russian Manufacturer Emblazons Trump's Face on Their Shipments
There were at least two things Americans should have banned outright in the 1970s when they had the chance: asbestos and Donald Trump. By Zachary Small.
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+34 +1Child drownings in Germany linked to parents' phone ‘fixation’
German lifeguards have issued a warning that a growing number of child drownings this summer are linked to their parents’ obsession with mobile phones. More than 300 people have drowned in Germany this year, with hardly a day passing during the current heatwave when a swimmer has not died. The German Lifeguard Association (DLRG) – the biggest organisation of its kind in the world, providing 40,000 volunteer lifeguards at German beaches, lakes and the coast – has made a direct connection between children getting into difficulty in the water and parents being too busy on their mobile phones to notice.
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+21 +1Button batteries kill. Here's how we can prevent needless child deaths from battery ingestion
Parents, carers and doctors need to be aware of button batteries in toys and household devices and ensure they can't be ingested.
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-1 +1Training Your Employees at Your Safety Providing Firm
If you are the owner of a firm that provides safety measures to other companies or individuals, then this article is something that you should most definitely read.
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+1 +1Meeting CGMP Standards in Warehouses
Out of all the standards and measurements warehouses should meet, CGMP is one of the newest—and potentially most perplexing for managers.
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+2 +1Why Didn't Goodyear Recall An RV Tire That's Linked To At Least 98 Deaths And Injuries?
In June 2002, facing numerous complaints about a tire that had been installed on thousands of motorhomes, Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. put out a service bulletin with one RV manufacturer to replace the tires for certain owners, free of charge. By then, Goodyear had received at least 20 injury and death claims over failures of the tire, the G159, as well as 310 property damage claims. Armed with knowledge of the high failure claim data, federal regulators are asking the company why it didn’t simply conduct a safety recall instead for the tires, which would’ve let owners of all G159-equipped RVs know about a potential safety issue.
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+3 +1Handle With Care: Chemical Safety Onboard Vessels
No matter how the industry changes, chemical transport is one of the most commonly seen applications of commercial vessels today. The waterways of America see hundreds of vessels every year carrying a wide range of chemicals and liquid substances, ranging from organic chemicals, food products (such as vegetable oils, molasses, and fats for industrial or …
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+24 +1It's food safety lore, but does the 5-second rule really work?
So how long does it take for microorganisms from your kitchen floor to attach themselves to that slice of pizza you dropped? Perhaps you're asking yourself the wrong question.
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+5 +1Five Safety Installations No Warehouse Can Live Without
By modifying your warehouse with the proper equipment, you can provide a safer and more productive environment for your staff, inventory and equipment.
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+12 +1A radical proposal to keep your personal data safe
The surveillance imposed on us today is worse than in the Soviet Union, says president of the Free Software Foundation, Richard Stallman.
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