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The main objectives of EHS are to identify and mitigate potential hazards, prevent accidents and promote a safe and healthy living and working environment.
President Nixon signs the Occupational Safety and Health Act on December 29, 1970, which was enacted on April 28, 1971. In its first half century, OSHA has helped transform Americas workplaces in ways that have significantly reduced workplace fatalities, injuries, and illnesses.
Fire on the Cuyahoga River. In 1969, the Cuyahoga River in Ohio becomes so polluted that it catches on fire. The fire helped spur an avalanche of water pollution control activities such as the Clean Water Act and the Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement.
High Paying Environment Jobs Director of Sustainability. Salary range: $281,000-$400,000 per year. Director of Environmental Services. Salary range: $64,000-$159,500 per year. Reservoir Engineer. Environmental Director. Environmental Advisor. Sustainability Specialist. Environmental Manager. Chief Sustainability Officer.
Environment, health, and safety (EHS) refers to the management of environmental, occupational health, and workplace safety practices and procedures. The goal of EHS is to minimize negative impacts on employees, the public, and the environment from workplace hazards and operations.
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Course designed to help make employers aware of the OSHA standards and best practices available to prevent injury and illness as well as protect workers from the diverse hazards encountered in primarily non-production laboratories, including exposure to chemical, biological, and radiological hazards.
The History of EHS The term EHS was first coined in the early 1970s by the National Safety Council (NSC). At that time, the NSC was looking for a way to better describe the growing field of occupational safety and health. Prior to that, the field had been known simply as industrial hygiene.
The Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 heralded a new era in the history of public efforts to protect workers from harm on the job. This Act established for the first time a nationwide, federal program to protect almost the entire work force from job-related death, injury and illness.

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