EttkinLawrence P.ChapmanJ. Brad, “Is OSHA Effective in Reducing Industrial Injuries?”Labor Law Journal (April 1975), p. 236.
2.
House Committee on Education and Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Act, RH #91-1291, 91st Congress, Second Session, 1970.
3.
U.S. Department of Labor, Job Safety and Health, Number 1 (Washington: Government Printing Office, November-December 1972), p. 32.
4.
U.S. Department of Labor, The President's Report on Occupational Safety and Health (Washington: Government Printing Office, May 1972), p. 1.
5.
CordtzDon, “Safety on the Job Becomes a Major Job for Management,”Fortune (November 1972), p. 113.
6.
“OSHA Chief Doesn't See it the Way Chains Do,”Chain Store Age Executive (April 1975), p. 17.
7.
Ibid.
8.
For more detailed information, see GrossMarjorie, “The Occupational Safety and Health Act: Much Ado about Something,”Loyola of Chicago Law Journal (1972), p. 247; Horneberger, “Occupational Safety and Health Act,”Cleveland State Law Journal (1972).
9.
KirklinStephen R., “OSHA: Employer Beware,”Houston Law Review (November 1973), p. 429.
10.
“The Book on OSHA Rules: Do It Anyway,”Iron Age (19 October 1972), p. 17.
11.
“OSHA: A Worthwhile Law with Several Uncorrected Faults,”Industry Week (14 October 1974), p. 21.
12.
SteigerWilliam A., “OSHA: Four Years Later,”Labor Law Journal (December 1974), p. 726.
13.
MoranRobert D., “How to Obtain Job Safety Justice,”Labor Law Journal (July 1973), pp. 387–388.
14.
KehoeEdward J., “The Federal Occupational Safety and Health Act: Its Impact on Management, Safety, and Public Relations,”Public Relations Journal (August 1972), p. 25.
15.
FoulkesFred K., “Learning to Live with OSHA,”Harvard Business Review (November-December 1973), p. 60.
16.
“OSHA: A Worthwhile Law with Several Uncorrected Faults,”Industry Week (14 October 1974), p. 21.
17.
TathamRonald L.CooganJames H., “OSHA: Anticipating Problems Between Purchasing Manager and Supplier,”Journal of Purchasing (November 1973), p. 63.
18.
Foulkes, op. cit., p. 62.
19.
“How the Safety Act Affects Banks,”Banking (May 1972), p. 61.
20.
“Purchasing—OSHA's Man in the Middle,”Purchasing (6 February 1973), p. 37.
21.
JacksonJohn D., “Let the Standards Do the Talking,”Purchasing (6 February 1973), p. 47.
22.
Ibid.
23.
TathamCoogan, op. cit., p. 67.
24.
Foulkes, op. cit., p. 63.
25.
See NicholasJack R.Jr., “OSHA, Big Government and Small Business,”MSU Business Topics (Winter 1973), pp. 57–64.
26.
CooganJ. DanielJr., “Financing Compliance with OSHA,”Industrial Development (May-June 1973), p. 11.
27.
“Small Business: The Maddening Struggle to Survive,”Business Week (30 June 1975), p. 98.
28.
Kehoe, op. cit., p. 26.
29.
“OSHA Chief Does Not See It the Way Chains Do,”Chain Store Age Executive (April 1975), p. 17.
30.
Ibid.
31.
“The OSHA Tangle,”Chain Store Age Executive (April 1975), p. 15.
32.
“Chain's Plan Takes the Sting out of OSHA,”Chain-Store Age (August 1973), p. E-27.
33.
“The OSHA Man is Coming and He's Changing Your Buying Habits,”Progressive Grocer (December 1972), p. 35. For futher information on sanitation requirements, see MasonJoseph BarryMayerMorris L., “Regulation of Sanitary Practices in the Food Industry: New and Emerging Guidelines,”MSU Business Topics (Summer 1975).
34.
“The OSHA Man is Coming,” p. 15.
35.
“OSHA Chief Does Not See It the Way Chains Do,” p. 17.
36.
SheehanJohn J., “OSHA and Job Safety Plans,”Monthly Labor Review (April 1974), p. 44.
37.
Foulkes, op. cit., p. 88.
38.
TathamCoogan, op. cit., p. 64.
39.
Kirklin, op. cit., p. 446.
40.
Ibid., p. 449.
41.
“OSHA and the Metal Working Industry,”Iron Age (21 June 1973), p. 38.
42.
“A Hobbled OSHA Seeks Relief,”Business Week (12 April 1976), p. 95.