Worker Safety Round-up

Workers Can Participate in CSB Investigations:A major goal of the Occupational Safety and Health Act is to encourage workers to participate in the process, including allowing workers to walk around with OSHA inspectors. When the Chemical Safety Board was authorized, the law required that workers be given the same opportunity to participate in facility investigations as provided by OSHA. In 2012, the CSB finalized a workers particiaption policy, but it was then classified as a confidential document. So how were workers to know they were allowed to participate in CSB investigations?

Good question.

Last week, the CSB voted 2-1 to revise that policy and issued it publicly. Board members Kristen Kulinowski and Richard Engler voted to issue the policy while Manny Ehrlich abstained.  Calling workers “critical sources of information relevant to the investigation,” the new policy gives workers (or their representatives) the right to participate in the following activities: Investigation opening meetings, status update meetings, and closing meetings, site walk-throughs and on-scene investigation activities, equipment, material, and sample evidentiary testing; employee witness interviews; document requests; and review of draft written reports and recommendations.

Can Safety and Productivity Co-exist? There’s a common myth going around these days that high profits and business success are incompatible with health and safety regulations and enforcement. Former OSHA head Dr. David Michaels disagrees. At the National Safety Council conference, Michaels recalls how employers would tell him that after a tragic fatality or other incident, they improved their health and safety program and not only saw injuries and illnesses decrease, but also saw gains in other areas of the business, such as quality and productivity.

His observation were mostly anecdotal and now Michaels, a professor at the George Washington University, is looking to develop “methodologically sound, data-driven research that seeks to determine whether a true causal relationship exists between these areas.”  It’s too late if you have to wait for people to get killed or seriously injured before you improve you safety program, according to Michaels. So they executives have to understand that organizational success, quality or productivity improvements, and other key business metrics go along with safe workplaces.

More Production = More Injuries? Health and safety enforcement may not lead to lower profits, but there is some evidence that increased production can lead to more injuries — at least for miners who work in five coal mines purchased by Murray Energy Corp. in 2013. After Murray bought the mines from CONSOL Energy, coal production rose 50%. But injury rates climbed to 6.35 per 200,000 work hours last year, up from 2.79 in 2013.” That’s the highest injury rate for the group in a decade and 70 percent above the national average for underground mines.”

So did higher production cause the injuries? Murray spokesman Cody Nett says no. The alleged increases are because employees are falsely reporting injuries when they want to take time off for other reasons. Oh, and CONSUL under-reported injuries.   MSHA disagrees wit Murray. Robert Murray, by the way, “is among the coal sector’s most vocal advocates for rollbacks of environmental and safety oversight, frequently arguing that government regulation is unnecessarily onerous and costly for companies.”

Miners’ Lungs On the Agenda When Congress Returns: And speaking of coal miners, as we’ve noted recently, the nation’s coal miners are facing a surge in cases of black lung disease. The good news is that there is the Black Lung Disability Trust Fund, which provides federal benefits to some coal miners with the disease. The bad news is that a 10-year old excise tax on coal companies that supports the fund will be cut by half at the end of the year unless Congress acts soon. The Government Accountability Office has found that “the fund could be in serious financial trouble in the coming years unless the tax is reauthorized.” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has promised to address the problem as soon as Congress returns from its election recess so that miners don’t lose their benefits and health insurance.

Learning the Lessons of Lac Megantic — or not: We’ve written a lot about the Lac-Megantic rail disaster that killed 47 people in the Canadian town when a train carrying 73 cars of highly combustible crude oil derailed in the small Quebec town of Lac-Mégantic in 2013 turning the downtown into a raging inferno. Now Bruce Campbell, the former executive director of the Canadian Center of Policy Alternatives and expert in oil-by-rail regulations, has written a book, The Lac-Mégantic Rail Disaster: Public Betrayal, Justice Denied which blames the disaster on rail deregulation in Canada in the 1980s and 1990s, industry-captured regulators, reduction in crew sizes, unsafe train cars transporting volatile oil, and corporate reluctance to implement costly safety measures. Campbell fears that while oil-by-rail shipments continue to grow, many of the problems that led to the disaster have not been corrected. “I saw a series of policies that progressively removed safety protections and gave increasing power to the companies. Its enabler, or sibling policy — austerity — weakened the regulator. It became more and more dysfunctional internally. Of course, [Canadian National Railway] was privatized, which further enabled this process.” There are lessons to be learned in the United States as well.

Putting the Data to Work: In 2015, OSHA issued its “electronic recordkeeping rule,” the first phase of which required large and high hazard employers to send their injury and illness summaries in to OSHA. OSHA has now announced that it will be putting that data to work by using it in its “Site-Specific Targeting Program” which will focus inspections on high injury rate establishments (establishments with elevated Days Away, Restricted or Transferred — DART — rate) in both the manufacturing and non-manufacturing sectors. The program will also focus inspections on those establishments that did not provide the required 2016 data to OSHA in 2017.  The 2017 data was due to OSHA by July 1, 2018. The original regulation also required employers to send in more detailed injury and illness data, but OSHA has proposed to repeal that part of the regulation. The Obama administration had also intended to post the injury and illness summary data on the OSHA website, but the Trump administration has so far refused. In addition, OSHA recently issued a memo weakening enforcement of language in the regulation that protects worker from retaliation for reporting injuries or illnesses.

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Reposted from Confined Space