phone Pomoc-kontakt

The New York Times Agency May 2010

EN_00913897_1069
The New York Times Agency May 2010
(NYT36) TYLER, Texas -- Jan. 9, 2003 -- WORKERS-SAFETY-III-3 -- McWane Inc., one of the world's largest makers of cast-iron sewer and water pipes, is one of America's most enduring violators of worker-safety and environmental laws, according to government records and regulatory officials. In interviews, exasperated regulators use words like "lawless" and "renegade" to describe McWane. The history of the Tyler Pipe plant located in Tyler, Texas, owned by McWane, was a case study of a persistent violator, of fines assessed and paid without any discernable impact. The Tyler Pipe plant located in Tyler, Texas, in Oct. 2002. (Mark Graham/The New York Times)
CENA MINIMALNA - 100 USD
2003-01-09
EAST NEWS
The New York Times Agency
Mark Graham/The New York Times/Redux
15813567
0,93MB
25cm x 14cm przy 300dpi
2002, 2003, 9, A, ACCORDING, AMERICA, AND, ANY, ASSESSED, BY, CASE, CAST-IRON, DESCRIBE, DISCERNABLE, ENDURING, ENVIRONMENTAL, EXASPERATED, FINES, GOVERNMENT, GRAHAM, HISTORY, IMPACT, IN, INC, INTERVIEWS, IS, JAN, LARGEST, LAWLESS, LAWS, LIKE, LOCATED, MAKERS, MARK, MCWANE, MOST, NEW, NYT36, OF, OFFICIALS, ONE, OWNED, PAID, PERSISTENT, PIPE, PIPES, PLANT, RECORDS, REDUX, REGULATORS, REGULATORY, RENEGADE, SEWER, STUDY, TEXAS, THE, TIMES, TO, TYLER, USE, VIOLATOR, VIOLATORS, WAS, WATER, WITHOUT, WORDS, WORKER-SAFETY, WORLD, YORK,