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IJCSA Updates & Industry News
Janitors at the Boston offices of WeWork Companies Inc., a New York-based co-working space company with a $10 billion valuation, are staging a rally Monday afternoon to promote "fair pay."
The event, called "Rally for Good Cleaning Jobs at WeWork," is scheduled for 3:30 p.m. outside the WeWork South Station location at 745 Atlantic Ave., and is being organized by 32BJ, a property service worker's union with 18,000 members in Massachusetts.
Janitors who clean WeWork's offices in Boston are being paid about $10 an hour with "few, if any, meaningful benefits," according to a release from 32BJ. They're advocating for similar office-space cleaning jobs that get paid $17 an hour.
From their release:
WeWork, the hip co-working start-up, valued at $10 billion by investors, likes to brand itself as 'a space, community, and services you need to make a life, not just a living.' Apparently, in Boston this doesn’t apply to the contracted cleaners who pick up after the darling of the sharing economy who will be rallying in the Financial District on Monday to tell WeWork to use a responsible cleaning contractor that pays fair wages that meet the industry standard.
More at source: Biz Journals
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A former employee at a San Diego County specialty food company said his supervisor ordered him to dump chemicals in public drain.
Marcos Estes, an ex-janitor at Fresh Creative Foods in Vista, told NBC 7 Investigates he shot video of the July 15 incident on his cellphone.
His boss allegedly ordered him and his co-workers to dump the partial contents of 75 chemical containers in a drain at the company’s warehouse on Birch Street. Estes said he had no training in chemicals or waste disposal.
“At the time, I didn't realize how dangerous the chemicals were," Estes told NBC 7 Investigates.
He said those chemicals burned his skin, damaged his lungs and harmed a co-worker who helped him get rid of the substances. Estes started recording the dumping when he realized the chemicals could injure people and were a danger to the environment.
"This stuff got inside the gloves, inside my boots, and burned my hands, burned my feet and my knee, my back and my shoulder,” he said.
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HUDSON, Mass. —A former Hudson elementary school janitor is suing the school district, claiming her boss ignored her complaints that she was being sexually harassed by a co-worker.
Sandra Nguyen, who worked for more than nine years at the Farley School, alleges her supervisor failed to take action when she complained that a colleague was showing up to work intoxicated, leering at her and making explicit comments about her body, MetroWest Daily News reported Thursday.
Nguyen, who was fired by the school district last year, claims she then faced retaliation from her superiors for speaking out about her treatment and for raising concerns about the behavior of another custodian.
In a lawsuit filed earlier this year in Middlesex Superior Court, Nguyen claims she suffered "substantial emotional and financial harm" as a result, including loss of wages and benefits. She is seeking at least $28,000 in back wages, as well as attorneys' fees and exemplary and punitive damages.
More at source: WCVB
A company with a big contract to clean the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport is accused of misleading county officials and shortchanging minority businesses in the process.
When the Broward County Commission awarded Sunshine Cleaning a $62 million janitorial contract at the Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood Airport, the firm promised to spread 30 percent of that wealth to small and minority companies to fulfill its obligations under the County Business Enterprise program.
But the company then created a scheme to mislead the county regarding minority participation, according an Office of Inspector General report issued Wednesday, claiming in reports filed with the county that it provided nearly $11 million in business to those small companies, but in reality only giving about $660,000 in business to them.
Video and more at source: Local 10
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MOSCOW -- Russian authorities have begun to remove foreign brands of detergent and washing powder from stores, claiming that they pose health risks.
The Consumer Protection Agency said in a statement on Tuesday that recent inspections of selected goods by top foreign brands such as Colgate-Palmolive and Procter & Gamble have found high levels of toxic ingredients.
Moscow extended its ban earlier this month on selected food imports from the EU and other countries. Russia, however, has not banned the imports of detergent and washing liquid and most of the producers mentioned by the agency have production facilities in Russia.
More at source: CBS
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“They came to work every single day and performed their jobs well,” said Daisy Cruz, Mid-Atlantic District leader for the Service Employees International Union-affiliated 32BJ, which represents property service workers. “They did nothing wrong. This was a decision based on numbers, they are not looking at the lives they have affected.”
Estela Rios worked five years as a day porter for Teva, earning $14.50 an hour with benefits washing windows and keeping the lobby and bathrooms clean. Through an interpreter, Rios said that on March 13, she and nine of her coworkers were unexpectedly told it would be their final week of employment.
“They suddenly changed contracts, there was no warning that this would be happening,” Rios said. “We have not heard from them since we left.”
After five months of emails, phone calls and letters with no response, Rios and her former coworkers walked to the main gate Thursday in an attempt to meet with Teva officials face-to-face. Led by Cruz, they were met at the front entrance by a Teva representative who did not identify himself. He would not allow the group past security and advised them to use the contact information on the website to communicate with the company executives.
More at source: Bucks County Courier
SACRAMENTO – Norcal Floor Services, Inc., a North Highlands based janitorial service that had contracts with several area markets, has been hit with citations totaling $459,573 for wage theft. Labor Commissioner Julie A. Su issued the citations after a nearly two-year investigation and audit of the company that alleges they paid 12 workers, many of them recent immigrants from El Salvador, an average wage of $7.53 per hour. California’s minimum wage ranged from $8 to $9 per hour during that period.
The investigation and audit alleges that managers threatened to fire workers who complained about working up to seven days in a row every week, for up to 9 hours a day, without breaks of any kind.
A few of the janitors contacted the Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund (MCTF), a janitorial watchdog organization, about the workplace abuses. MCTF helped them file a complaint with the Labor Commissioner’s Office.
The citations against Norcal Floor Services include $456,073 for unpaid minimum wages and overtime, liquidated damages and rest and meal period premiums. The Labor Commissioner also assessed $3,500 in penalties for violating overtime, minimum wage, rest and meal period requirements, and for failing to provide itemized wage statements. The janitors’ payments range from $560 to $81,915, based on the amount of time worked during the investigation period.
More at source: CVBJ
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The source of an unusual odor at Jefferson Hospital Monday night was determined to be a spilled cleaning product, a spokeswoman for the hospital said.
Spokeswoman Candy Williams said staff alerted the fire department to an unusual smell in the hospital around 9 p.m.
Crews discovered shortly after that the source of the smell was a cleaning product that spilled in a storage room on the same floor as the operating rooms, Allegheny Health Network Media Relations Director Dan Laurent said.
Williams said as of 10 p.m., the spill had been cleaned up, but firefighters remained at the scene to help with ventilation.
At no time were there any evacuations or impact on patient care, Williams said.
Source: WPXI
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Embarrassing! - Matt
Concerns about hospital "superbugs" have spotlighted the need to prevent the spread of germs in health-care settings. But a new report reveals a disturbing lack of knowledge on something as basic as proper cleaning of a patient's room.
Very little research addresses the best ways to disinfect and sanitize the hard surfaces in a hospital room, investigators report in the Aug. 11 issue of Annals of Internal Medicine.
"We basically found that there are studies available to guide actions, but there are much fewer than you might expect for such an important issue," said lead author Dr. Craig Umscheid, an assistant professor of medicine and epidemiology at the University of Pennsylvania's Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia.
At any given time, about one in every 25 hospital patients has an infection they got from being at a hospital, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. An estimated 721,000 health care-related infections occurred in 2011, which led to about 75,000 deaths, the authors noted in background information.
Hand-washing receives much attention for preventing the spread of germs, but disinfecting the hard surfaces in an examination room or hospital suite can be just as important, Umscheid said. Many dangerous germs are spread by touching counters, floors, tray tables, bed rails, IV pulls, light switches, toilets, and even call buttons.
Many experts believe that only 50 percent of surfaces are typically disinfected during cleaning of a patient's room, according to background notes.
For this report, researchers reviewed 80 studies published between 1998 and 2014.
The investigators found only five randomized, controlled trials that explored the best ways to disinfect surfaces. Most were before/after studies, in which germs were measured on a surface before and after a cleaning product had been used.
Fewer than 35 percent of the studies focused on infection rates or spread of disease due to unclean surfaces, the researchers said.
They also found that most studies only examined the effectiveness of a single cleaning product or method, rather than comparing it against others.
More at source: WEBMD
Office MD's of Atlanta Sponsors Gwinnett County Sheriff's 3rd Annual Obstacle Course Race. It was a fun filled battle and Office MD's was there to support the county.
Office MD's of Atlanta is an up and coming janitorial company making waves in the Health & Wellness field. Our primary clients range from physicians, to clinical, sports medicine, chiropractic, family practices and multi-medical buildings...
Member: International Janitorial Cleaning Services Assoc..
Visit our website:
www.officemdsofatlanta.com
http://www.jailbreakchallenge.org
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