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As a subscriber you can listen to articles at work, in the car, or while you work out. Subscribe NowThe number of Hoosiers who died on the job last year ticked up from the previous year. But the total still represents the
second-fewest workplace fatalities since the federal government began tracking the statistic in 1992, the Indiana Department
of Labor said today.
In 2008, 132 workers died on the job in Indiana, an increase of five from 2007, when the lowest
number of workplace fatalities was recorded in Indiana. The 2008 total was 11 percent below the 10-year average.
Industries with the highest fatality rates last year were agriculture (22), construction (19) and manufacturing (18), the
department said.
The transportation and warehousing sector, which typically leads the state in occupational deaths,
recorded 16 deaths last year, its lowest number on record.
When combining all industries, transportation-related
deaths were the leading cause of work-related deaths in Indiana, the department said. In 2008, 61 deaths were transportation-related,
including 27 highway accidents and 14 in which workers were struck by vehicles.
The Department of Labor said it
continues to increase its enforcement efforts to lower the number of workplace fatalities, injuries and illnesses. In 2008,
the Indiana Occupational Safety and Health Administration conducted nearly 2,000 workplace inspections, about a 70-percent
increase from the previous year, the department said.
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