Ink Works Publication Services, Inc.
Confined Space: news and commentary on workplace health and safety, labor and politics
Photos from Earl Dotter, labor photographer
 

News Notes

President Bush announced his resignation today. Vice President Cheney will not take over, however, citing health reasons. Nancy Pelosi is our new president!

Dishonorable Mention: Purple Prose: "The sun rose over the horizon like a great big radioactive baby's head with a bad sunburn but then again it might just have been that Lisa was always cranky this early in the morning." -- Debra Allen, Wichita Falls, TX


 
 

Email Services

You can keep up with Confined Space with our email services:

Join the Confined Space Google Group for a weekly update

Read the Confined Space archives

Get Email Updates

Each day or whenever there is new content, you'll receive an email listing links to the day's headlines.

by FeedBurner
 
 
 
 

Recent Comments

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Stats, Badges, and Credits

 
 
 
 

Confined Space Badges

Mini Badge

Small Badge

Medium Badge

 

Archive for the 'Injuries' Category

Don’t Make Me Hurt You

Here’s one I haven’t seen before.

A concerned health and safety construction trainer sent me this memo that one of his students from Briggs Engineering in Massachusetts had given him.

The Briggs employee was distressed by the memo and said that he felt that management was putting the financial responsibility for health and safety program compliance on his shoulders.

The trainer sent a copy of the memo to OSHA asking them if this was OK.

Obviously, if a company can merely shift its fiduciary reponsibility for CFR 1926 safety regulations on to its workforce by way of a memo, this trend will catch on like wildfire nationwide. I trust that this isn’t the way you expect a responsible management to behave by threatening or extorting compiance costs out of its workforce to achieve corporate safety program compliance.

If I am wrong on this and this corporate policy is acceptable with OSHA, please let me know so that I can immediately adjust my training curriculum accordingly.

Well apparently, he’s going to have to change his curriculum because an the OSHA rep responsible for dealing with discrimination cases told him that OSHA won’t intervene unless the company actually carries through with the threat.

Hello? Punishing workers is a violation of the, but threatening to punish workers is just fine as long as you don’t actually do it? So if a manager can be so serious in his threats that his employees don’t dare “force” him to carry through, it’s perfectly fine?

As the concerned trainer said:

It’s almost like telling a cop that the guy over there just threatedn to shot me and the cop answering that he won’t even talk to the guy until after he does shoot me.

Yeah, except that these are Bush times.

NY City Plagued By Fatal Falls

With the death of Klever Ramiro Jara in a 17 story fall from a scaffold earlier this week, there have now been 17 fatal falls in New York city in the past year. Most of the workers killed in New York construction accidents have been immigrants.

Officials said the employee in yesterday’s accident was moving between two scaffoldings about 25 feet apart that were attached to a building on Fifth Avenue at West 17th Street. Around 8:45 a.m., the employee, Klever Ramiro Jara, 25, of Brooklyn, unclipped his harness and was walking on a building ledge when he apparently fell.

In response to Jara’s death, the city has formed a task force to improve fall safety for construction workers. But we need more text here in order to test the double blockquotes. The 28-member task force will develop a policy for safety enforcement, worker training and oversight by the middle of next month, said Buildings Commissioner Patricia Lancaster.

In August, New York State Comptroller Alan Hevesi announced that following an audit by his office, the New York City Department of Buildings had increased inspections and revamped or instituted new databases to improve its oversight over the issuance and monitoring of permits for cranes, derricks and scaffolds to maintain public safety.

The results of the audit were pretty disturbing:

Auditors made random unannounced site visits in Manhattan, Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens during August and September 2005 to observe cranes and scaffolds and determine if valid permits were in place. Auditors determined that there was no valid permit on record for 43 of 144 pieces of equipment (30 percent), including 41 of 104 scaffolds (39 percent) and 2 of 40 cranes (5 percent).

Department of Buildings inspectors followed up auditors’ findings by visiting the sites where the 43 equipment items without valid permits were located. The inspectors issued Stop Work Orders (SWO) at five of the sites, where seven scaffolds were still operating without permits. Auditors later visited these five sites and found that work continued at three of them, despite the SWO.

In late September and early October 2005, auditors visited 78 sites where scaffolding permits had expired between August 1 and September 12, 2005. At 12 of the 78 sites (15 percent) scaffolding was still present, and work was underway at four of those 12 sites.

It’s not yet clear whether Jara’s employer had a valid permit.

According to the NY Times, things are getting so bad that even employers are getting fed up:

Louis J. Coletti, president of the Building Trades Employers’ Association, which represents about 1,500 construction managers, contractors and subcontractors, said the task force needed to find ways to create and enforce strict universal standards for all builders, and to punish violators.

“Fines are not enough,” he said. “They should be put out of business.”

And then there was this stupid statement from Mayor Michael Bloomberg:

“People that work in this city deserve to have a safe workplace,” he said. “Now, some of the jobs are just inherently dangerous — you’re up there in scaffolding; you know, to say, ‘Well, let’s put it inside,’ you can’t do. But we’ll do everything we can to make them safe.

Shrugging you shoulders and saying a job’s “inherently dangerous” is one step away from sayting “shit happens.” No one’s saying that people shouldn’t work on scaffolds. It can be done safely — it just takes equipment, training and the good management to make sure it gets done.

Support this Site

Winner of the 2005 Koufax Award for Best Single Issue Blog

Koufax Award Finalist

For Best Single Issue Blog of 2003 and 2004.

Learn more…


Check Out Our Advertisers!

Worker Safety Under Siege

Labor, Capital, and the Politics of Workplace Safety in a Deregulated World. The rights of workers to safe and healthful workplaces are under attack to a greater extent now than at any time since the passage of OSHA. Read more...

Advertise Here

Advertise Liberally
The photography of Earl Dotter.

Read Much?

BOOKS ARE GOOD!

Plus, when you shop at Powells, I get a commission. It's an easy, informative way to support Confined Space.

NEED HELP?

Take a look at our recommendations from the Confined Space Reading List

Check out Powells' Labor Bookshelf

Daily Quote

The only kinds of fights worth fighting are those you are going to lose, because somebody has to fight them and lose and lose and lose until someday, somebody who believes as you do wins.

In order for somebody to win an important, major fight 100 years hence, a lot of other people have got to be willing — for the sheer fun and joy of it — to go right ahead and fight, knowing you're going to lose. You mustn't feel like a martyr. You've got to enjoy it.

-- I.F. Stone

Get Firefox
homebulletaboutbulletcontact

DISCLAIMER: The views expressed here are my own and do not in any way, shape or form, reflect or represent the views or policies of my employer. Links to or from other websites do not constitute an endorsement of these views.

© Jordan Barab under a Creative Commons License  |  Photos from Earl Dotter   |  Design by Ink Works

Close
E-mail It