Canberra’s brothels have scored top marks on compliance with industry specific safety laws, but general OHS is not getting as much love.

China has executed a mining billionaire for “organising and leading a mafia-style group”, murder and other crimes.

Hungry Jack’s has been fined $90,000 after an Adelaide employee fell into fry oil, and no one called an ambulance.

The Cancer Council says that despite great efforts to improve, the risk of carcinogen exposure still stalks Australian workplaces.

A tune-up is on the way for Victorian transport and safety authorities.

The Transport Workers Union wants AirAsia banned from Australian airspace.

CFMEU officials will face court over allegations that they ordered work to stop on a Queensland construction site for six days, because the head contractor refused to remove a Safety Manager the CFMEU did not like.

Authorities are warning that there is no cheap fix for asbestos contamination across New South Wales schools.

Linfox and Toll – two of the biggest players in the transport industry – have rejected a call for truck drivers to be paid ‘danger money’.

BHP Billiton is looking to avoid a $2.2 million payment to a dying mesothelioma victim.

Nissan has been forced to recall a string of its R52 Pathfinder vehicles.

New aviation rules could see all planes sending out a signal every minute, in an effort to find aircraft more easily when they disappear.

The humble roundworm could become a pioneer of modern scientific safety, as part of tests to measure the toxicity of nanoparticles.

Anti-fossil-fuel activists are planning a near week-long festival at the Whitehaven Coal mine in New South Wales.

Tasmanian electricity provider Tas Networks is facing some criticism for not reading meters at properties where there is a dog.

The Master Builders Association says lives will be put at risk when the Victorian Government scraps drug and alcohol tests on building sites.

New South Wales builders will be able to save money and stay safe with the announcement of free access to the National Construction Code.

The Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) says one building site in regional New South Wales is exploiting dozens of foreign workers, with some paid just four dollars an hour.

There have been some loud responses to a new report on the negative effects of wind farms.

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