Governor Schwarzenegger Reduces Funding for Safety Inspectors


Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger eliminated funding for 15 new workplace safety inspectors, citing statistics that injuries and illnesses in California are on the decline.
For more information, visit View a commentary on the Confined Spaces blog at http://spewingforth.blogspot.com/2006/07/schwarzenegger-saves-pennies-at.html.

 

Monday, July 17, 2006

 

                                                     Schwarzenegger Saves Pennies At Expense Of Workers' Lives

 

This article would be funny if the joke wasn't at the expense of workers' lives.

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger used his line-item veto to strike $1.5 million in funding for 15 new workplace safety inspectors, out of a $131.4 billion state budget. The excuse was that
CalOSHA already has open positions that it can't fill.

Cal/OSHA spokeswoman Renee Bacchini said the agency was neutral about the state budget allocation for more inspectors.

She acknowledged, however, that the agency is having trouble keeping up the staffing levels it already has money budgeted for, mainly because the private sector offers better salaries.

"Not that we don't want to fill them," she said. "They're up there on the state job site. Please come apply."

Or... maybe we could pay them what they deserve. Right now the pay and benefits of a CalOSHA Industrial hygienist lag almost 40% behind comparable public sector jobs in other agencies in the
San Francisco Bay area, and 20% statewide, according to CAPS. I mean, whatever happened to capitalism, supply and demand and all that?

Then there's this: The inspector's union, the California Association of Professional Scientists (CAPS), argues that it's the short staffing of CalOSHA that led to the injury underreporting that was
recently exposed in Bay Bridge skyway project. An audit by the California state auditor earlier this year revealed the CalOSHA had not monitored the project well enough. The contractor, KFM Joint
Venture, had claimed that the project was five times safer than the average heavy construction project. But the Oakland Tribune revealed that the company's amazing safety record was likely due to
the $100 to $2,500 bonuses that depended on the number of worker hours logged without reporting a recordable injury, rather than safe working conditions. KFM and it's lead firm, Kiewit
Pacific Company, also used the stick: suspending workers without pay for reporting injuries.

CAPS blamed Cal-OSHA's chronic understaffing for the serious enforcement problems detailed in the State Auditor’s office probe and Cal/OSHA officials have admitted that they do not have the
resources to monitor the accuracy of those reports. Last month, CalOSHA issued three citations to KFM, A Joint Venture, including a "willful regulatory violation" for the unreported injuries,
 and fined the company a whopping $5,790.

Now here's the funny part. In an effort to justify it's short-staffed operations, CalOSHA spokesperson Bacchini

disputed that employers might routinely fudge their injury reports.

"If the employers are not reporting those things, then they're in violation of the law," Bacchini said, and subject to penalties and fines.

Asked how effective a $5,790 fine would be on a $1 billion contract, she said that fines "go up and up and up.

"If they have a horrible history, their fines get higher and higher."