Trump
Just Put America’s Workers at Risk
Kathleen Rest, Executive
Director, Union of Concerned Scientists
Make America great again? |
From
fields to factories and mines, from hospitals and nursing homes to schools and
stores, from office buildings and construction sites to fishing vessels and
fire stations—workers are the real engines of our economy. (Not to mention the
irreplaceable place they hold in our hearts as our partners, moms, dads,
brothers, sisters, children, and friends.)
President
Trump decided that one way to make America great again was to order federal agencies to identify for
elimination two regulations for every new one they might propose in fulfillment
of their statutory responsibility to protect our health, safety, and
environment.
Aside
from questioning the legality of such a directive, let’s take a look at what
this means for working men, women, and even children in this country.
Think you’ve had a hard day at work?
Yes,
we’ve come a long way since the days of Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle.
But workplace injuries, illnesses, and deaths still take a grave toll on our
nation’s workforce.
In
2015 (the last year for which data are available), 4,836 workers died after
sustaining an injury at work. That’s 13 people every day. In America. Another
2.9 million non-fatal workplace injuries and illnesses were reported by private
industry employers and an estimated 752,600 injury and illness cases were
reported among state and local government workers.
The
economic burden is immense, over $250 billion annually in medical and
productivity costs. And cost estimates cannot begin to capture the pain,
suffering, and loss experienced by these workers and their families.
Two for one: Who would you protect?
The
Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), along with the Mine
Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), have been given the authority and
responsibility to help protect our nation’s workforce.
President
Trump has now sent them a chilling directive. If you find a new hazard or new
exposure that threatens the health and safety of workers, and want to require
employers to control or eliminate them, then repeal two existing rules.
Which protections would you eliminate?
- Rules requiring personal protective equipment such as hard hats, respirators, and safety goggles to avoid head injuries, lung damage, burns, cuts, or blindness?
- Ventilation to ensure air quality and prevent exposure to harmful dusts and chemicals?
- Noise control or ear protection to avoid hearing loss?
- OSHA’s new beryllium standard rule that offers protection to many thousands of workers in construction, shipyards, and general industry (like electronics, telecommunications, and defense). (Beryllium causes lung cancer and chronic beryllium disease.)
- Protection from needle stick injuries and the transmission of blood-borne disease?
This
kind of across the board directive defies common sense. It essentially forces
the agencies to pick which workers will be winners and losers when it comes to
safety on the job.
Or, as my friend Celeste Monforton so aptly said, “one step forward, two steps back is
never a good thing.”
What message is Trump sending?
Well,
that’s pretty clear. He wants to chill, halt, and stop the use of a
critical tool in the public protection toolbox.
“If you have a regulation you want, number one we’re not going to approve it because it’s already been approved probably in 17 different forms. But if we do, the only way you have a chance is we have to knock out two regulations for every new regulation. So if there’s a new regulation, they have to knock out two. But it goes way beyond that.”
Yes,
it sure does. The same Executive Order set a budget of exactly $0 for the
total incremental cost of any new regulations in 2017.
While
nobody loves the abstract idea of government regulation, I think we can all
agree on the need for rules that keep our nation’s working men and women safe
and healthy. They, after all, are what has and will continue to make America
great.
Trump is sending a clear message. It’s time to send a message right back. Let
him and your representatives in Congress know that this new policy puts our
nation’s workers at risk and is not acceptable.