Can Workers Hope to Be Safe at Last?
Tuesday 02 March 2010
by: Dick Meister, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

(Image: Jared Rodriguez / t r u t h o u t; Adapted: gillicious, Dave McLean)
It's called musculoskeletal disorder or MSD, the most common of the serious injuries suffered by US workers. But because corporate employers fear that greater public awareness would force them to spend more on job safety, MSD has remained one of the least understood of injuries.
The latest government figures show that more than 60 percent of the million or more on-the-job injuries reported annually are MSD-related. Some of the victims are permanently disabled, and many more have to take time off from work while their injuries heal.
The victims include computer operators, factory and construction workers, meat and poultry processors, hospital and restaurant employees, supermarket clerks and many others. They suffer serious neck, shoulder and back problems, chronically sore arms and wrists and other repetitive motion injuries resulting from work that requires them to be in almost constant motion bending, reaching, typing or frequently lifting heavy objects.
The first serious government efforts to combat the rapidly growing problem of MSD came ten years ago, in the final days of the Clinton administration. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) issued a lengthy set of so-called ergonomic regulations that were designed to lessen the dangers of MSD.
The regulations, which had taken three years to draft, covered such things as how long and how many breaks workers in particular occupations should get, what protective equipment should be issued to them, how their work stations should be designed and hundreds of related matters.
That was way too much for the US Chamber of Commerce and other corporate employer representatives. They got their Republican allies, who controlled Congress, to repeal OSHA's regulations just before the decidedly anti-labor George W. Bush succeeded Clinton.
Certainly, neither Bush nor his OSHA appointees would even consider such impingements on their corporate friends. Signing the legislation that repealed the ergonomic regulations was one of Bush's first acts as president. He followed that quickly by revoking 19 previously approved grants that were to go to unions, universities and labor-management groups to finance safety and health training programs for small-business employers and particularly vulnerable groups such as construction workers and immigrants.
Bush's OSHA appointees, many of them former executives of the industries they were supposed to regulate, blocked, withdrew or weakened dozens of other safety regulations in addition to those covering MSD. They discontinued safety education and training programs, worked with Congress to cut their own barely adequate budgets and instead of enforcing the safety laws, stressed "voluntary compliance" by employers.
But now come Barack Obama and his labor and Democratic Party allies to resume the fight for the ergonomic regulations President Clinton was forced to abandon.
The initial proposals of President Obama's OSHA appointees are modest. They're asking merely that employers note, on the accident reports they are required to file, whether the injury was MSD-related. No such designation is currently required, which makes it difficult - if not impossible - for OSHA to collect the accurate data required to develop a program for effectively dealing with MSD, the most serious safety problem faced by American workers.
Corporate employers, headed by the Chamber of Commerce, oppose even that simple reform. They fear it would be a first step toward development of an ergonomic safety program that could cost employers millions of dollars to implement.
It also could bring badly needed protections to US workers. But workers' concerns are, of course, of secondary interest to the Chamber of Commerce and its Republican friends. They're not much interested in helping working people. Their role is to further the profit-seeking of employers, even if that should come at the expense of the men and women who do the nation's work.

This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.



Comments
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It's not an election year.
Tue, 03/02/2010 - 14:53 — Anonymous (not verified)It's not an election year. Obama doesn't even know we exist right now.
He can't bend over for corporate interests fast enough. He just doesn't do it as loudly as bush did, but they are one and the same.
"workers' concerns are, of
Tue, 03/02/2010 - 15:14 — Curt (not verified)"workers' concerns are, of course, of secondary interest to the Chamber of Commerce and its Republican friends"... I beg to differ: worker's concerns are of no interest whatsoever to the Chamber or its Republican friends. Workers are now "human resources" to be pillaged exactly as "natural resources" are in the quest for ever-increasing profits.
How does one distinguish
Tue, 03/02/2010 - 20:45 — Anonymous (not verified)How does one distinguish between MSD and simple muscle fatigue--sore muscles at the end of a day's work?
It would seem that we are "medicalizing" everything.
How does one
Tue, 03/02/2010 - 23:29 — Lawrence Turners (not verified)How does one distinguish,
Try working for thirty years at hard physical labor and then come back.
I will tell you its all in your head!
Pass that joint!
1:45 Anonymous "He jests at
Thu, 03/04/2010 - 09:03 — Anonymous (not verified)1:45 Anonymous
"He jests at scars that never felt a wound."
MSD is NOT sore muscles. You are trivializing a disorder that is nearly as bad as silicosis. It is very serious and can result in torn ligaments, surgeries to the shoulders, wrists, and elbows of computer users. Physical therapists are kept in business by the damage done from repetitive motion injuries. "He jests at scars that never felt a wound."
Of course, preventive physical therapy is a luxury only those with good health insurance can access. I have had four episodes of physical therapy over the past decade, extending for months at a time, to prevent permanent damage, and I am not a secretary.
Let me assure you, you are too young and inexperienced to make a judgment - as you clearly have - on this issue.
OK, "How does one": I'll
Thu, 03/04/2010 - 13:19 — Frances in California (not verified)OK, "How does one": I'll give you my arthritis (no charge!), then you come do my job. Then you can talk.