Results tagged “worker safety” from Hearings
The U.S. House Education and Labor Committee held a hearing on Thursday, October 29 to examine the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s critical review of Nevada’s workplace health and safety program. OSHA reviewed Nevada’s health and safety program between January 2008 and June 2009 and found a number of deficiencies with the plan. A spate of accidents drew national attention during the city’s building boom that killed 12 construction workers on the Las Vegas strip over an 18-month period between 2006 and 2008.
To read the OSHA review of the Nevada health and safety program, click here.
To learn more, visit this blog post.
Archived Webcast »
To read the OSHA review of the Nevada health and safety program, click here.
To learn more, visit this blog post.
Witnesses:
- U.S. Sen. Harry Reid » Nevada
- Jordan Barab » Acting Assistant Secretary of Labor Federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- Debi Koehler-Fergen » Mother of worker killed at the Orleans Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas
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Don Jayne »
Administrator
Nevada Division of Industrial Relations Department of Business and Industry - Franklin Mirer » Professor of environmental and occupational health Hunter College of the City University of New York
Created with flickrSLiDR.
The Workforce Protections Subcommittee of the House Education and Labor Committee held a hearing on Thursday, April 30 on the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration’s Enhanced Enforcement Program.
The Enhanced Enforcement Program identifies high risk employers by their past behavior and targets them for additional scrutiny. However, the U.S. Department of Labor Inspector General’s Office issued a report on April 1 that found the Bush administration did not properly enforce worker health and safety laws used to oversee employers with history of safety violations. It shows that over the last five years, since the program was established, the EEP has failed to effectively deter employers from putting workers’ lives at risk.
Archived Webcast »
The Enhanced Enforcement Program identifies high risk employers by their past behavior and targets them for additional scrutiny. However, the U.S. Department of Labor Inspector General’s Office issued a report on April 1 that found the Bush administration did not properly enforce worker health and safety laws used to oversee employers with history of safety violations. It shows that over the last five years, since the program was established, the EEP has failed to effectively deter employers from putting workers’ lives at risk.
Witnesses:
- Jordan Barab » Acting Assistant Labor Secretary Occupational Safety and Health Administration
- Eric Frumin » Director of Health and Safety Change to Win
- Elliot Lewis » Assistant Inspector General for Audits U.S. Department of Labor
- Jesus Royas, stepson of Raul Figueroa, » a worker who was crushed to death as a result of unsafe working conditions West Palm Beach, Fla.
- Jason Schwartz » Partner Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP
The House Education and Labor Committee will hold a hearing on whether our nation’s health and safety laws ensure that employers who fail to protect their workers are adequately penalized and deterred from committing future violations.
Congress passed the Occupational Safety and Health Act in 1970 with the goal of assuring safe and healthful working conditions to all American workers. Nearly 40 years later, while workplace health and safety has improved, many workers remain at risk of death, injury or illness while on the job.
Archived Webcast »
Congress passed the Occupational Safety and Health Act in 1970 with the goal of assuring safe and healthful working conditions to all American workers. Nearly 40 years later, while workplace health and safety has improved, many workers remain at risk of death, injury or illness while on the job.
Witnesses:
- Rebecca Foster » stepmother of Jeremy Foster who died as a result of a workplace safety violation Danville, Ark.
- Lawrence P. Halprin » Partner Keller and Heckman LLP
- Margaret Seminario » Safety and Health Director AFL-CIO
- David Uhlmann » Professor and Director of Environmental Law and Policy Program University of Michigan Law School
Rep. Lynn Woolsey, chair of the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections, opening statement.
