Kenneth J. Allen & Associates - Injury Attorneys

Illinois and Indiana Personal Injury Lawyers and Attorneys Trial and Civil Litigation Law Firm.

Passion. Commitment. Excellence.

Those three words best describe the driving forces behind Kenneth J. Allen & Associates. Our firm is devoted exclusively to the practice of Accident and Injury Law, and exclusively to the people - not corporations - seriously hurt or killed in incidents as varied as on-the-job accidents, semi-truck crashes, injuries from a defective product, or loss of life because of a doctor's medical malpractice.

As the only multi-state law firm in Valparaiso Indiana, Merrillville Indiana, Indianapolis Indiana, Northwest Indiana, Chicagoland, Joliet Illinois, Tinley Park Illinois, Chicago Illinois accepting serious injury and wrongful death cases, exclusively, Kenneth J. Allen & Associates is experienced and knowledgeable in the details and procedures that can make or break a case.

phone (219)465-6292 fax (219)477-5181
1109 Glendale Boulevard Valparaiso, IN 46383

Monday-Friday: 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

Saturday-Sunday: closed

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OSHA ISSUES NEW STANDARDS FOR ON THE JOB HEAD GEAR FOR THOSE WORKING CONSTRUCTION, LONGSHORING, OR IN SHIPYARDS

posted by kjalaw on Jul 3rd, 2012 at 7:45 am

This month,the federal government through OSHA (Occupational Safety and Health Administration) has changed the rules for those working in several very dangerous kinds of work.  The new final rule from OSHA applies to head protection (hard hats, helmets, etc.) worn by those working in general industry as well as in shipyards, marine terminals, longshoring, and those involved in construction.

This is a great thing, since some of the OSHA requirements here had not been revisited and updated in forty-eight years.  That’s right: 48 years.

What’s happening here?

OSHA is making its federal requirements line up with the hard hat safety standards already set by the American National Standards Institute.   This is important because some of OSHA’s hard hat standards hadn’t been updated since the late 1960s.  That’s a long time, even for something that many see as so basic: hard hats haven’t evolved all that much in the past 50 years right?  Wrong.

Employers will be happy to learn that hard hats made to meet old ANSI standards set in 1997 as well as 2003 will be okay with OSHA.  That’s because these hard hats will meet the new design criteria set out by the new OSHA rule.

 

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