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 'MSHA' Category

Bush’s Appointment of Stickler To MSHA: “A Sign Of Stubbornness and Weakness”

Washington Post regulatory columnist Cindy Skrzycki describes what’s so wrong with President Bush’s recess appointment of Richard Stickler as head of MSHA.

The Senate sent Richard Stickler’ s nomination to become the top U.S. mine-safety official back to the White House — twice. Widows and relatives of dead miners pleaded that he not be given the job. Stickler lacked the support of lawmakers from key mining states, and some newspaper editorials criticized him as an industry insider.

None of this fazed the White House. When Congress departed for its Election Day recess, President Bush on Oct. 19 made Stickler head of the Mine Safety and Health Administration in the Department of Labor. His tenure will last though the end of the Senate’s next session, sometime next year.

In Washington parlance, it’s called a recess appointment, a maneuver often used by the White House to bypass political opposition. The Senate goes out on recess, leaving the door open for the president to put in his choice. It’s sort of like appointing a chief executive without the board of directors getting a vote.

And according to Skrzycki, there are a few other notable observers who also think it was a bad thing:

“It strikes me as a sign of stubbornness and weakness,” said Paul Light, a professor of public service at New York University and an expert on the executive branch. “Recess appointments can do a great deal of damage and not have the support of the agency. It sets the stage for intense conflict over rules” between the career staff members and the unconfirmed appointee.

And then there’s our friend Tony Oppegard:

The Mine Safety and Health Administration “has been run by industry insiders,” said Tony Oppegard , former general counsel to Kentucky’s mine safety agency and an adviser at MSHA during the Clinton administration. “The whole emphasis has been on compliance assistance. It’s been a major failure of the administration. They don’t look for safety advocates.”

But there might be one silver lining emerging from this, according to Skrzycki:

The recess appointment may also ensure that thousands of members of the United Mine Workers of America, which opposed the nomination, get out to vote against Republicans next week, according to union spokesman Phil Smith.

“In doing this, he [Bush] has said what he is going to say about how important coal miners are, even in states like Pennsylvania and West Virginia where his supporters are looking for votes,” Smith said.

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