Committee on Education and Labor : U.S. House of Representatives

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Last-Minute Secret Labor Department Proposal Will Harm Workers, Witnesses Tell House Labor Panel

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

 

WASHINGTON, DC -- {Witnesses told the House Workforce Protections Subcommittee today that a last-minute Department of Labor proposal could undermine future health and safety protections for American workers.

“I am troubled by the Department of Labor’s attempt to rush through this rule without a full consideration of its effect on the health and safety of American workers,” said U.S. Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), chair of the subcommittee. “This proposed rule has without explanation leapfrogged ahead of many other worker protection standards that OSHA should have been working on for the last 8 years.”

The Washington Post recently reported that the proposal was developed by political appointees in secret with little consultation with career agency health and safety experts. The proposal only gives 30 days for comment and provides for no public hearings.

 “The proposed risk assessment rule has been developed in secret by political appointees…with little involvement by OSHA and MSHA and with no public notice prior to its publication,” said Peg Seminario, director of safety and health at the AFL-CIO. “The department is trying to rush the proposal through and is depriving the public of an opportunity to meaningfully participate in this rulemaking process.”

Critics say that the Department of Labor proposal would add additional layers of red tape to an already slow regulatory process, even for those initiatives being considered. The Bush administration has only issued one health related standard over the past eight years, which they were forced to complete under a court ordered deadline.

“Our nation’s system for protecting workers from harmful substances that cause injuries, illnesses, and deaths is paralyzed,” said Dr. Celeste Monforton, a lecturer at the department of environmental and occupational health at The George Washington University. “Thousands of workers are exposed every day to chemical compounds and physical hazards that are known to be harmful, yet these exposures are permitted by outdated or non-existent OSHA and MSHA standards.”

In July, U.S. Rep. George Miller, chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, proposed legislation (H.R. 6660) to forbid the Department of Labor from issuing, administering or enforcing the department’s proposal.

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