March 3, 2008 The Pump Handle 2Comment

OSHA’s Assistant Secretary Edwin Foulke is expected to travel to Port Wentworth, Georgia today, more than 3 weeks after a horrific combustible dust explosion at Imperial Sugar took 12 workers’ lives.  Another 11 workers remain in critical condition at a burn treatment center in Augusta.  Apparently, pressure from Congressman Jack Kingston (R-GA) and Senator Johnny Isakson […]

March 3, 2008 The Pump Handle 7Comment

The Health Affairs Blog has put up links to its top 10 most-read blog posts of 2007, which gave me a chance to read one I’d missed when it was first posted: Linda Aiken’s myth-busting about the nursing shortage. She starts with the grim statistics: Currently, the United States is short an estimated 150,000 nurses. […]

February 29, 2008 The Pump Handle 1Comment

For the first time, beginning on April 29, it will be unlawful for employers in the mining industry to expose workers to asbestos concentrations higher than 0.1 fiber (per cubic meter of air) over an 8-hour shift.  MSHA published today a new exposure limit for asbestos to replace a 2.0 fiber limit which has been on the books since 1978 when the agency […]

February 27, 2008 The Pump Handle

The Charlotte Observer’s excellent series on poultry workers began by detailing the injuries workers suffer and the way company officials dismiss their complaints (highlighted in a previous roundup), and continued with a look at the inadequate regulations, inspections, and fines for poultry-processing plants. For the company House of Raeford Farms, which it cited for dozens […]

February 27, 2008 The Pump Handle 1Comment

Diacetyl – the butter-flavoring chemical linked to severe lung disease in food and flavoring workers – hasn’t been in the news much recently. It got a lot of attention in September, when we drew attention to the case of a Colorado man who appeared to have developed bronciolitis obliterans from eating microwave popcorn twice a […]

February 24, 2008 The Pump Handle 3Comment

That’s the headline from an editorial in today’s Savannah Morning News, laying responsibility for the broken workplace safety regulatory system on the Secretary of Labor’s desk.  The words of editorial page editor, Tom Barton, sound like those I’ve heard before when a workplace disaster strikes a town.  Journalists, community leaders, and family member victims are […]

February 21, 2008 The Pump Handle

There are a number of memorable quotes in the Center for Study of Responsive Law’s newly released report “Undermining Safety: A Report on Coal Mine Safety.”   In one section, report author Christopher W. Shaw discusses the mining industry’s lobbying for “targeted inspections” (a la the OSHA model) instead of the current requirement for mandatory quarterly inspections.  The AFL-CIO’s secretary-treasurer Richard […]

February 20, 2008 The Pump Handle 1Comment

In the Washington Post, Petula Dvorak describes the jobs of social workers in the nation’s capital: As guardians watching over thousands of the city’s imperiled children each year, social workers confront armed drug dealers, push past stoned parents, shrug off cockroaches, sit on urine-soaked couches and hug kids covered in scabies. … Often, the most […]

February 20, 2008 The Pump Handle 3Comment

OSHA’s Regional Office in New York announced the successful resolution of a retaliation case filed by a worker who was discharged by his employer after he expressed concerns about entering a workspace which had just been “bombed” with an insecticide.  The case began more than two years ago at a residential housing complex in Flushing, NY, called […]

February 19, 2008 The Pump Handle 12Comment

If you haven’t heard yet, USDA has ordered the largest meat recall in U.S. history – 143 million pounds of beef from the Hallmark/Westland Meat Packing Company. USDA officials believe that the meat distributed by the company poses little or no hazard to consumers, which is fortunate, because much of it has been eaten already. […]