Trump
and Workplace Safety
By
Phil Mattera in the Dirt Diggers Digest
He’s called the
Environmental Protection Agency “a disgrace,” saying it is “making it
impossible” for companies to function.
Yet it’s difficult to find any
statements by Trump on another favorite regulatory whipping boy for
conservatives: the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Trump’s
silence on the subject is all the more significant given that in his business
career he has had personal experience with workplace safety issues. Those
dealings have not always put him in the best light.
The
biggest controversy he has faced in this area involves the Trump SoHo New York.
During construction of the high-rise hotel in January 2008, a portion of the
top two floors buckled while
concrete was being poured, sending one worker, Yurly Yanchytsky, plummeting 42
stories to his death and injuring three others, one of whom survived only
because he fell into protective netting (photo).
This
was not the first blemish on DiFama’s safety record. According to the OSHA inspection database, during the previous four years the
company had been cited by OSHA for about a dozen serious violations and
initially penalized $97,000 (negotiated down to about $67,000).
One of those
cases also involved a fatality. DiFama, by the way, was founded
by Joseph Fama, who had been identified as an associate of the Lucchese
organized crime family. In 2005 he divested his
interest in the firm because he was being imprisoned after pleading guilty to
federal racketeering and extortion charges.
Trump
initially distanced himself from the accident, saying that he had simply
licensed his name to the project.
Yet the New
York Daily News reported last
year that a top official at Bovis Lend Lease, the general contractor for the
project, stated in a deposition that Trump had personally reviewed the
agreements with the subcontractors, including the one with DiFama.
The Trump
SoHo is currently listed on the Trump Organization website as part of its real estate portfolio and its hotel collection.
The
SoHo hotel is not the only Trump-related property to have had problems with
workplace safety. The OSHA inspection database lists other violations at places
such as the Trump International Hotel & Tower Las Vegas.
Undoubtedly, there
are many more listed under the names of the contractors and subcontractors
hired on the various projects. Inspection records from the 1980s show numerous
violations at the Atlantic City casinos Trump owned at the time but
subsequently had to sell.
Trump
has boasted that
he would be “the greatest jobs president that God has ever created.” It remains
unclear how important it is to him that those jobs be free from undue safety
and health risks.