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Worker Protection Measure Introduced by Lawmakers
http://safety.blr.com/display.cfm/id/103464
Democratic members of Congress have introduced legislation to reduce the
number of American workers killed or injured on the job each year.
Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts and Patty Murray of Washington proposed
a measure in the Senate, and Representatives Lynn Woolsey of California
and Phil Hare of Illinois introduced an identical bill in the House. The action came a day after the AFL-CIO released an annual report showing that in 2005, the most recent year for which data were available, over 5,700 workers in the United States were killed on the job. That's an average of 16 per day, with another 4.2 million injured.
Supporters say the Protecting America's Workers Act would boost
workplace safety by strengthening and expanding the Occupational Safety
and Health (OSH) Act.
It would:
Woolsey, who chairs the House Subcommittee on Workforce Protection,
noted that thousands of lives have been saved since passage of the OSH
Act in 1970. But she said too many people continue to die on the job.
"This administration has a dismal record on health and safety. OSHA has
fallen down on its job and turned its back on workers." She says that
with the new measure "we can make OSHA mean something again."
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