Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "Occupational Safety"


25 mentions found


Dollar General hasn't provided updates on a shareholder-endorsed audit of worker safety at its stores, an investor group says. Dollar General said it has met with the investor"including multiple calls with members of executive leadership." In May, Dollar General shareholders approved a proposal asking the company to audit worker safety at its stores. A Dollar General spokesperson said it has "a strong, ongoing shareholder engagement program and a well-documented track record of responsiveness to shareholder feedback." AdvertisementAdvertisementThe lack of action on safety at the chain's stores is a concern for many Dollar General shareholders, Gallagher told Insider.
Persons: hasn't, , Amy Domini, it's, Mary Beth Gallagher, Michael Calbert, Gallagher, didn't, Domini, doesn't, David Williams, Williams Organizations: Dollar, Service, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, OSHA, Department of Labor, New York Times, Company, Investors Locations: North Dakota, Texas, Jacksonville , Florida
Crews began the arduous process of removing layers of rubble and debris in the search for a missing worker Thursday at a collapsed coal mine preparation plant in eastern Kentucky where a second worker died. Officials briefly made contact with one of the two men working inside, but announced Wednesday he died amid rescue efforts. Authorities said Thursday they have not had any communication with the second worker since the building collapsed at around 6:30 p.m. Tuesday in Inez, a town of about 500 people. In the second full day of rescue efforts, officials are removing the debris into smaller piles for the search. Slinker estimated that up to 50 rescue workers and 25 support personnel at a time were involved in the search.
Persons: Crews, ” Martin, Lon Lafferty, Lafferty, , ” Crews, Inez, Jody Meiman, Meiman, Jeremy Slinker, , Lyndon Johnson Organizations: Martin, Prep, Authorities, Louisville Metro Emergency, Emergency, Kentucky, Occupational Safety, Health, Lexington Coal Company LLC, Skeens Enterprises Locations: Kentucky, Martin County, Inez, Louisville, Sandy
Ohio's attorney general said last year that Dollar General overcharged customers for items like groceries. Under the settlement, Dollar General will pay $750,000 to the office of Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost. Many Dollar General stores are so cluttered with merchandise that fire marshals have ordered them to close. Dollar General is taking $95 million in write-downs on surplus merchandise as well as deploying "smart teams" to stores that need cleaning up. Do you work or shop at Dollar General and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , Dave Yost, doesn't, Hannah Hundley, NBC4 Organizations: Service, Columbus TV, Ohio, Dollar, Employment Opportunity Commission, US Occupational Safety, Health Administration Locations: Ohio, Butler, Southwestern Ohio, Columbus, The Tennessee
An employee looks for items in one of the corridors at an Amazon warehouse. Amazon warehouse workers are suffering physical injuries and mental stress on the job as a result of the company's extreme focus on speed and pervasive surveillance, according to a new study. The data adds to a drumbeat of scrutiny around Amazon's workplace safety and treatment of warehouse employees. The researchers estimate Amazon is the largest warehouse employer in the country, accounting for an estimated 29% of workers in the industry. In June, a Senate committee led by Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., also launched a probe into Amazon's warehouse safety.
Persons: they've, they're, Sen, Bernie Sanders Organizations: University of Illinois Chicago's Center, Urban Economic, Amazon, Regulators, Walmart, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, U.S, Attorney's, U.S . Department of Justice Locations: U.S
Health workers face mental health crisis, CDC says
  + stars: | 2023-10-24 | by ( Giri Viswanathan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +5 min
CNN —Researchers from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are sounding the alarm on a mental health crisis for health workers around the country. The report, released on Tuesday, also shows that health workers face worse mental health outcomes than employees in other industries. The study found that health care workers reported an increase in poor mental health days between 2018 and 2022. According to the CDC report, harassment had major impacts on health workers’ mental health: Health workers who reported being harassed were 5 times as likely to report anxiety compared to those who were not. The CDC’s National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health also plans to launch a national campaign this fall to help hospital leaders address challenges to health workers’ well-being — part of an ongoing initiative by the agency to raise awareness about health workers’ mental health challenges.
Persons: Kaiser Permanente, , Debra Houry, Houry, ” Houry, ideation, , Casey Chosewood, Dr, Sanjay Gupta, Chosewood, ” Chosewood, Organizations: CNN, US Centers for Disease Control, Health, Kaiser, District of Columbia, National Institute for Occupational Safety, Worker Health, CNN Health,
[1/2] The new GM logo is seen on the facade of the General Motors headquarters in Detroit, Michigan, U.S., March 16, 2021. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Oct 12 (Reuters) - U.S. investigators on Thursday proposed $270,000 in fines for a General Motors (GM.N) and LG Energy Solution (373220.KS) joint venture battery plant in Ohio for safety and health violations. "The company’s focus on the future must include an emphasis on workplace safety to ensure the well-being of its employees," OSHA Area Director Howard Eberts in Cleveland said. OSHA said Ultium needs to install required machine guarding, train workers in hazardous energy control and emergency response procedures and make other changes. Since the Warren, Ohio, facility began battery cell production in August 2022, OSHA has cited the plant 11 times, the agency said.
Persons: Rebecca Cook, Howard Eberts, Warren, David Shepardson, Bill Berkrot Organizations: General Motors, REUTERS, Rights, U.S, LG Energy, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, OSHA, Ultium Cells, Thomson Locations: Detroit , Michigan, U.S, Ohio, Cleveland, Warren , Ohio
Companies Tesla Inc FollowBERLIN, Oct 10 (Reuters) - Tesla (TSLA.O) on Tuesday rejected claims by a German union and recent media reports that health and safety provisions at its gigafactory near Berlin were inadequate, stating that protecting workers' health was a top priority. On Monday, German union IG Metall said its membership numbers from Tesla workers were rising steeply amid concerns over health and safety as well as overwork. In a written statement, Tesla said workers received training on necessary safety measures, as well as protective clothing. The plant was subject to regular checks by local authorities that safety measures were being respected, it added. The company did not address the specific claims of the union or media reports regarding the number of accidents or workers off sick at the plant.
Persons: Metall, Tesla, Victoria Waldersee, Christina Amann, Aurora Ellis Organizations: Tesla, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Berlin, U.S, Brandenburg
When her husband, a UPS truck driver, nearly died from heatstroke, Theresa Klenk stepped in to help workers negotiate for air conditioning in all UPS trucks. At the time, she said, no UPS drivers wanted to speak up about the increasingly brutal conditions for fear of being reprimanded. According to UPS, drivers stop on average every three minutes — barely enough time for air-conditioning to make a dent. This year’s record heat caused dozens of deaths, filled some hospitals to pandemic levels and prompted government warnings about avoiding extended exposure to heat. It was a bittersweet victory for Jim and Theresa Klenk.
Persons: Jim Klenk, Klenk, Theresa Klenk, hadn’t, Jim, Theresa, Jim didn’t, , Zoe Todd, Jim’s, Joe Raedle, Jordan Barab, , Michael Dwyer, Memphis , Tennessee —, Theresa said, didn’t, weren’t, ” Theresa, Mike Blake, Sean O’Brien, doesn’t, ” — CNN’s Clare Duffy Organizations: New, New York CNN, UPS, Teamsters, , CNN, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, OSHA, US Chamber of, Bureau of Labor Statistics, US Postal Service, FedEx, Amazon, Kroger, Teamster Locations: New York, Freehold , New Jersey, heatstroke, Miami, Texas, Memphis , Tennessee, Atlanta, , L.A
WEST READING, Pa. (AP) — A Pennsylvania chocolate factory was fined more than $44,000 by the federal workplace safety agency on Thursday for failing to evacuate before a natural gas explosion that killed seven people. Palmer Co. did not heed warnings from employees about a natural gas leak, according to the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which issued multiple citations to the company. Palmer Co. did not evacuate the facility after being told of a suspected gas leak,” OSHA Area Director Kevin T. Chambers, of the agency’s Harrisburg office, said in a written statement. Employees in both buildings told federal investigators they could smell gas before the explosion. Workers at the plant have accused Palmer of ignoring warnings of a natural gas leak, saying the plant, in a small town 60 miles (96 kilometers) northwest of Philadelphia, should have been evacuated.
Persons: Kevin T, Chambers, ” Palmer, Palmer Organizations: Palmer Co, . Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Palmer, Employees, Workers Locations: Pennsylvania, Palmer, Harrisburg, West Reading, Philadelphia
Sept 30 (Reuters) - A semi-truck carrying thousands of gallons of a toxic substance crashed in southern Illinois, and the multi-vehicle accident killed five people and left five seriously injured, officials said on Saturday. Early estimates indicated that 4,000 gallons were spilled, leading to about 500 people being evacuated from the area, the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency said. The accident led to an evacuation within a mile's radius of the crash due to the plume from ammonia leak, state police said. Illinois State Police said it was notified about the crash "involving multiple vehicles, including a semi-truck that is leaking anhydrous ammonia." Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Washington; Editing by Leslie AdlerOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Louis, Kanishka Singh, Leslie Adler Organizations: Illinois Environmental Protection Agency, U.S . National Transportation Safety Board, Illinois State Police, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, OSHA, CBS, Thomson Locations: Illinois, Teutopolis, Effingham County, St, Washington
In May, staff at the Beltsville Agricultural Research Center in Beltsville, Maryland, filed a complaint with the U.S. Office of the Special Counsel (OSC), which protects federal whistleblowers, alleging mismanagement and unsafe work conditions including poor lab ventilation, broken fire alarms and wild temperature swings. After Reuters exclusively reported the complaint, USDA closed one major research building at the site for repairs. Maintenance tasks should be performed on a schedule ranging from daily to annually, the complaint said. BARC staff conduct research on climate change, invasive pests, crop yields and more. Reporting by Leah Douglas; Editing by Cynthia OstermanOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: BARC, Leah Douglas, Cynthia Osterman Organizations: U.S . Department of Agriculture’s, Research, Staff, U.S . Department, Reuters, Agricultural Research, U.S . Office, USDA, OSC, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Centers for Disease Control, OSHA, Thomson Locations: Beltsville, Beltsville , Maryland, Legionella, BARC's
Staff, meanwhile, have been forced to put their real jobs on hold to prepare for the looming shutdown. National parksThe National Park Service plans to close its parks and furlough park rangers if the government shuts down on Sunday. During the 2018-2019 shutdown, the parks themselves remained accessible, but without most services. Some presidential libraries would remain open as long as they have sufficient funds, but others would close and research services would be reduced. A shutdown would result in a "data blackout" of critical economic statistics that influence markets and businesses around the globe.
Persons: Donald Trump, that's, Biden, Joshua, Armando L, Sanchez, Pete Buttigieg, they're, White, Treasury Department furloughed, shutdowns Organizations: Yosemite, Fresno Bee, Tribune, Service, Getty, White House Council, Economic Advisers, Management, Staff, National Park Service, Park Service, Department of Interior, NBC, Congressional Research Service, National Zoo, U.S . Holocaust, Museum, National, Science, National Science Foundation, National Institutes of Health, Centers for Disease Control, Prevention, FBI Agents Association, FBI, Air, Transportation Security, LaGuardia, TSA, O'Hare International, State Department, Consular, Education Department, AmeriCorps, Agriculture Department, Assistance, Women, Small Business Administration, Federal Housing Administration, Social, Consumer, Food and Drug Administration, Consumer Product Safety, Environmental Protection Agency, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Labor, , Social Security, Medicare, Treasury Department, Foreign Assets Control, Russia Locations: El Capitan, Yosemite Valley, Washington, Civil, U.S, Europe, Southeast Asia, New Mexico, shutdowns, New York, Chicago, Russia, Iran, Ukraine
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A worker who died during the weekend of an injury received at a temporary Formula One Las Vegas Grand Prix grandstand construction site at the Bellagio resort fountains was identified Monday by authorities. The death of Tizoc Antonio, 37, of Las Vegas, was accidental, the Clark County coroner’s office said. Las Vegas police reported Saturday the worker was pronounced dead at University Medical Center after receiving what was described as a “severe laceration” on his neck. Political Cartoons View All 1179 ImagesThe Las Vegas Review-Journal reported that tickets were priced at more than $11,000 per person for the spectator space in front of the Bellagio. Representatives with Bellagio casino operator MGM Resorts International and the Las Vegas Grand Prix did not respond Monday to email and telephone requests for comment.
Persons: Tizoc Antonio, Teri Williams, Organizations: LAS VEGAS, Las, Nevada Occupational Safety, Health, Vegas, University Medical, Bellagio, One, Bellagio ., MGM Resorts International, Las Vegas Locations: Bellagio, Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada, Vegas
TAIPEI, Taiwan (AP) — Taiwan authorities fined a golf ball manufacturer 2.4 million New Taiwan dollars ($75,000) on Monday and warned of criminal charges for storing 30 times the legal limit of hazardous material and other violations after a major factory fire killed nine people and left one other missing. Launch Technologies is one of the world's major golf ball makers, producing 20% of the global supply last year. Since 2018, the company has been fined 200,000 New Taiwan dollars ($6,200) for safety and health violations and another 300,000 New Taiwan dollars ($9,300) over labor conditions, according to Taiwan's Occupational Safety and Health Administration. The company was also fined 300,000 New Taiwan dollars ($9,300) for air pollution violations in 2020, according to its 2021 annual report. Company general manager Lu Ying-cheng said at a news conference on Sunday that Launch Technologies has made improvements to the work environment in recent years.
Persons: Chou Chun, Chou, Lu Ying, cheng, ” Lu, Wanqing Chen Organizations: Taiwan, Technologies, Taiwan's Central News Agency, . Company, Launch Technologies, Safety, Health Administration, Company, Taiwan Stock Exchange, Associated Press Locations: TAIPEI, Taiwan, Pingtung, Beijing
The Office of Management and Budget reminded senior agency officials Friday to update and review shutdown plans. Those plans can vary from shutdown to shutdown. The nearly 4 million Americans who are federal employees will feel the effect immediately. Essential workers will remain on the job, but others will be furloughed until the shutdown is over. For many of them, a shutdown would strain their finances, as it did during the record 35-day funding lapse in 2018-2019.
Persons: , , Doreen Greenwald, Everett Kelley, Pell, disbursing Pell, It’s, treasurers Organizations: CNN, Management, National Treasury Employees Union, American Federation of Government Employees, Transportation Security Administration, Social Security, TSA, of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, Business Administration, Futures, US Centers for Disease Control, Drug Administration, Safety, Health Administration, Environmental Protection Agency, , Smithsonian, National, National Archives, National Park Service, of Education, Federal Student Aid, Federal, Department of, Assistance, SNAP, US Department of Agriculture, Women, of Housing, Urban Development, Commission, Research, NOAA, Oceanic, Administration, National Science Foundation, Peace Corps, State Department, Defense Department Locations: United States, America, Washington, DC, shutdowns
Come September 30, some Americans may not see a paycheck or be able to visit parks. For everyday Americans, that could mean losing out on paychecks or childcare spots, and it could even worsen flight delays. The Social Security Administration, for instance, anticipates about 8,500 employees would be furloughed in a shutdown. Travel plans might be further disrupted as Transportation Security Administration workers and air-traffic controllers go without pay, the White House said. The White House has repeatedly said Republicans are bringing Americans this close to another government shutdown.
Persons: GOPers, Kevin McCarthy, holdouts, McCarthy, I've, Here's, wouldn't, Deb Haaland, Biden, Mike Simpson, Politico, we've, haven't Organizations: Service, Caucus, Main Street Caucus, Punchbowl News, Social Security, Management, Social Security Administration, Social, Department of Health, Human Services, Medicare, Center, American Progress, Environmental, Agency, Drug, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, US Department of Agriculture, NASA, Republican, Transportation Security Administration, Federal Budget, East, Republicans Locations: Wall, Silicon, East Coast, Idaho
A 19-year-old worker suffered "fatal injuries" after cleaning out a concrete mixer, the Department of Labor says. The machine restarted while he was inside, the DOL said. The DOL called his death a "preventable tragedy" and proposed penalties totalling $245,546. "As one of the workers left the mixer, the machine restarted with the other inside," causing him to suffer "fatal injuries," the DOL said. He called the worker's death a "preventable tragedy."
Persons: DOL, Jose A, Gonzalez Organizations: Department of Labor, Service, Foley Products Company, Safety, Health Administration, Transportation, City of Locations: Wall, Silicon, Cantonment, Florida, Georgia, Mobile , Alabama, Alabama, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, City of Atlanta
Washington, DC CNN —Baggage handlers and airplane cleaners at the Phoenix Sky Harbor International Airport say they are exposed to brutally hot temperatures and are asking for an investigation into their employer, Prospect Airport Services. Nearly a dozen workers wrote to the Arizona Division of Occupational Safety and Health to say that even on the overnight shift, temperatures spike to unsafe levels while cleaners work inside airplanes without air conditioning. The Arizona Division of Occupational Safety and Health acknowledged the complaint in a brief statement to CNN. “Because it is an open file, we cannot comment further.”The letter also says break rooms are hot, and there is limited access to water. The complaint, from a state that experienced extreme hot temperatures throughout the summer, follows years of complaints from flight attendants and other workers who want more regulations around hot planes.
Persons: , , Trevor Laky, I’ve Organizations: DC CNN —, Phoenix Sky Harbor, Prospect Airport Services, Arizona Division of Occupational Safety, Health, CNN Locations: Washington
Roughly one in five miners in the Central Appalachia coalfields of West Virginia, Kentucky and Virginia now have black lung disease, according to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health. Black lung, a devastating illness that scars lung tissue and makes breathing increasingly difficult, has made a comeback in the past two decades after hitting a low in the 1990s.
Organizations: National Institute for Occupational Safety, Health Locations: Central Appalachia, West Virginia , Kentucky, Virginia
Reuters also interviewed 63 current and former Axon employees, including nine former executives. No one with whom Reuters spoke was aware of deaths or lawsuits stemming from tasings of Axon staff. Axon has faced fewer lawsuits since 2009, the year it introduced a new Taser model with a lower charge. Screenshots from an Axon promotional video show CEO Rick Smith taking a Taser hit in 1993, the year he co-founded the business. And that’s off-putting.”Gorman, the former Axon lawyer, said he “vividly” remembers an executive asking him if he was going to be tased.
Persons: Ross Blank, Blank, Steve Tuttle, Shawn Gorman, , Jennifer Chatman, Rick Smith, Andrea James, ” James, Axon’s, tasings, ” Blank, Tuttle, Staff tasings, , Valencia Gibson, Gibson, Reuters –, Axon’s “, Bro, Josh Isner, Isner, James, , Ann Rosenthal, Rosenthal, ” Rosenthal, Sigma Chi, Smith, ” Smith, ” Michael Church, Hans Marrero, Marrero, ” Marrero, “ I’m, ’ ” Smith, “ It’s, ” Gibson, ” ‘, impressionable, squinting, Keara, Rylan, Mihir Shah, ” Shah, Mario Barth, “ Willing, It’s, Isaiah Fields, Wayne Guay, Lamar Cousins, Cousins, Kevin De Rosa Jr, De Rosa, ” Isner, Smith’s, De Rosa bellowed, They’re, ” Gorman, You’re, Jeffrey Dastin, Paresh Dave Art, John Emerson, Julie Marquis Organizations: Enterprise Inc, Reuters, Haas School of Business, University of California, Staff, Scottsdale, Yorker, U.S . Securities, Exchange Commission, . Occupational Safety, Health Administration, federal, Safety, Health, Labor, Sigma, Harvard, Sigma Chi, Boston Magazine, Harvard’s Sigma Chi, U.S . Marine Corps, YouTube, Employment, Los, Keara Berlin, ” Employees, Los Angeles Police Department, Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania, strapping, Culture Locations: Berkeley, Rome, United States, Arizona, U.S, Las Vegas, Los Angeles, , Berlin, Sacramento, San Jose , California, tasings, Mandalay, Scottsdale, wasn’t
An American Airlines worker is seen at the Los Angeles international airport in Los Angeles, California, U.S., October 31, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Aug 25 (Reuters) - The death of an airline employee in December and another serious injury prompted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to issue a safety alert on Friday to airlines in an effort to prevent more incidents. The safety alert reiterates that "it is important for workers to remain clear of operating engines until they are shut down," the FAA said. The alert comes as questions arise about U.S. aviation safety after a series of troubling near-miss incidents. The flight was operated by Envoy Air, a wholly-owned subsidiary of American Airlines and the worker was employed by Piedmont Airlines, another American subsidiary.
Persons: Carlos Barria, David Shepardson, Deepa Babington, Marguerita Choy Organizations: American Airlines, Los Angeles, REUTERS, Rights, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Montgomery Regional Airport, Envoy Air, Piedmont Airlines, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Airlines, Safety, Health, Commission, Thomson Locations: Los Angeles , California, U.S, Alabama
An American Airlines worker is seen at the Los Angeles international airport in Los Angeles, California, U.S., October 31, 2021. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsWASHINGTON, Aug 25 (Reuters) - The death of an airline employee in December and another serious injury prompted the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to issue a safety alert on Friday to airlines in an effort to prevent more incidents. The safety alert reiterates that "it is important for workers to remain clear of operating engines until they are shut down," the FAA said. The alert comes as questions arise about U.S. aviation safety after a series of troubling near-miss incidents. The flight was operated by Envoy Air, a wholly-owned subsidiary of American Airlines and the worker was employed by Piedmont Airlines, another American subsidiary.
Persons: Carlos Barria, David Shepardson, Deepa Babington Organizations: American Airlines, Los Angeles, REUTERS, Rights, Federal Aviation Administration, FAA, Montgomery Regional Airport, Envoy Air, Piedmont Airlines, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Airlines, Safety, Health, Thomson Locations: Los Angeles , California, U.S, Alabama
A 23-year-old construction worker died in March when an overloaded crane collapsed. Its 15 violations included failing to create or employ an accident prevention program. AdvertisementAdvertisementOSHA cited S&D Erectors with a total of 15 violations, including operating a mobile crane in excess of its rated capacity. The federal agency also said that S&D Erectors did not create and employ an accident prevention program, or perform frequent and regular inspections of the site. S&D Erectors could not be reached for comment.
Persons: DOL, Erectors, Timothy Minor Organizations: OSHA, Service, Department of Labor, Wednesday, Occupational Safety, Health Administration Locations: Wall, Silicon, Texas
Dollar Tree and Family Dollar stores must fix certain safety problems in 2 days or be fined by OSHA. Dollar Tree's parent company, Dollar Tree, Inc, bought Family Dollar in 2015. A Food and Drug Administration inspection found dead and alive rodents and dead birds inside a Family Dollar facility in Arkansas. The two store chains plan to create new employee training programs and hire more safety staff. Dollar Tree and Family Dollar also agreed to pay $1.35 million in penalties to settle a number of existing similar alleged violations.
Persons: They'll, Mike Creedon Organizations: OSHA, Service, Occupational Safety, Health Administration, Inc, Staff, Drug Administration Locations: Wall, Silicon, Arkansas
By Friday, he had his accident, and my son was gone Saturday morning,” Velma Infante, his mother, told CNN. CNN spoke to two women who lost loved ones who died while working outdoors in the extreme heat. According to what Eugene’s then-supervisor told Carla, her husband collapsed in a neighbor’s front yard while delivering mail. Velma Infante carries this vial which holds a print out of her son Gabriel's last heart beats. Velma Infante worries that other state governors might follow Abbott’s example and implement similar laws that could potentially roll back local worker protections.
Persons: Los Angeles CNN — Gabriel Infante, , Gabriel’s, Joshua Espinoza, Infante, EMTs, Infante wasn’t overdosing, ” Velma Infante, , Carla Gates, Eugene Gates, ’ Gates, Eugene, Carla, ” Gates, Carla didn’t, ” Carla, Eugene’s, Gates, Kimetra Lewis, Aaron Fisher, ’ Infante, Velma, ” Infante, Gabriel, ” Velma, Velma Infante, Gabriel's, John General, ’ ” Velma, Greg Abbott’s, Biden, we’re Organizations: Los Angeles CNN, CNN, US Postal Service, Dallas, Medical, National Association of, Carriers, USPS, Texas, Occupational Safety, Health Administration Locations: San Antonio , Texas, Bexar County , Texas, Bexar County, Dallas, Texas, Lakewood , Texas, Gates, Austin
Total: 25