The two things shouldn't have happened at the same time -- would've been better 
for the media if they'd happened a month or so apart.

Ed

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Sally Lerner 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Saturday, April 20, 2013 12:28 PM
  Subject: [Futurework] FW: No OSHA Inspections at Texas Plant in 5 Years: Are 
We Doing Enough to Protect Workplace Safety?


  Big contrast with Boston in terms of mainstream press coverage...  Sally


------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  From: Portside moderator [[email protected]]
  Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2013 6:25 PM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: No OSHA Inspections at Texas Plant in 5 Years: Are We Doing Enough 
to Protect Workplace Safety?


       
          
                No OSHA Inspections at Texas Plant in 5 Years: Are We Doing 
Enough to Protect Workplace Safety? 


              Interview with Mike Elk
              April 18, 2013
              Democracy Now!

              Every year in the United States, 4,500 Americans die a year in 
workplace accidents. And yet we only spend approximately $550 million on OSHA’s 
budget to prevent workplace accidents—on OSHA’s total budget.   
                
              An unidentified man injured by the West fertilizer plant 
explosion is treated by nurses from Hillcrest Baptist Medical Hospital in Waco, 
Texas, Wednesday, April 17, 2013, (AP Photo/Waco Tribune Herald, Jerry Larson), 
   
                In the wake of the deadly explosion at a Texas fertilizer 
plant, reporter Mike Elk of In These Times magazine joins us to discuss the 
plant’s safety record and the troubling regulatory environment for workplaces 
in Texas and nationwide. The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has 
not inspected West Fertilizer Co. in five years, and the EPA fined the plant in 
2006 for failing to have a risk management plan. Elk says OSHA is understaffed 
and underfunded nationwide, across all industries. [includes rush transcript]

              Transcript
              This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.

              AMY GOODMAN: I wanted to bring Mike Elk into the discussion. He’s 
with In These Times magazine. Mike, clearly this anhydrous ammonia is extremely 
powerful. I mean, back—I think it was 1947, Texas City ship had—thousands died 
in explosions then. Can you talk about how regulated this plant was, Mike Elk, 
as you research it?

              MIKE ELK: Yeah. So, basically, what’s interesting about this 
plant is, in the idea of workplace safety, we often talk about the idea of 
hazards, which is, you identify hazards, and you attempt to try to reduce the 
ability that those hazards result in accidents like the explosion we saw 
yesterday. Now, the story that The Dallas Morning News reported, that the plant 
said that there was no risk of explosion, shows that they did not properly 
identify the hazard, which led to the explosion, as we all know occurred. This 
is a big problem.

              This kind of plant here, we can tell from the records that we 
were looking over last night, OSHA has not inspected this plant in at least 
five years. And that’s not uncommon. This is a non-union facility. The way OSHA 
typically works, and as well as EPA, is that they get a call from a worker, and 
then inspectors show up, and they inspect the plant, and they find problems. 
When you have a non-union workforce, like you have in this plant, that’s a lot 
less likely, since many folks are scared of losing their jobs. So there hasn’t 
been an inspection in at least five years, from what we can tell.

              JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And the general problem of workplace safety and 
the government’s ability to inspect plants, for especially catastrophic 
accidents or accidents that take lives?

              MIKE ELK: Yeah. So, every year in the United States, 4,500 
Americans die a year in workplace accidents. And yet we only spend 
approximately $550 million on OSHA’s budget to prevent workplace accidents—on 
OSHA’s total budget. And when you think about that, when you think about the 
fact 4,500 Americans die a year in workplace accidents and we only spend $500 
million, and then you compare that to the hundreds of billions we spend 
overseas protecting Americans from acts of terrorism, it seems like there’s 
some misplaced priorities. At least that’s what workplace safety advocates 
would say. If you look at OSHA’s budget, OSHA is so severely understaffed. 
There are 2,200 inspectors in this country, OSHA inspectors, for eight million 
workplaces. Due to the understaffing of OSHA, OSHA could inspect a plant once 
every 129 years.

              AMY GOODMAN: Of course, OSHA stands for the Occupational Safety 
and Health Administration. I wanted to read you a quote of Rick Perry, Texas 
governor, an interview he did just April 9th with Newsmax. He said, "The men 
and women in Texas know something now after a decade-plus of our governorship 
and our policies being implemented by a Republican House, Senate, lieutenant 
governor and speaker. We’ve kept our tax burden as light as we could and still 
delivered the services that the people of Texas desire, and we have a 
regulatory climate that is fair and predictable. I cannot tell you how 
important is predictability and stability in the regulatory climate." Your 
response, Mike Elk?

              MIKE ELK: Yeah. The one issue that people that hate regulation go 
after the most is workplace safety. There was a study released by the GAO last 
spring in 2012 showing that OSHA takes twice as long as the EPA to issue rules 
and five times as long as the SEC to issue new rules. In fact, during the Obama 
administration, the Obama administration has not initiated and completed a 
single new workplace safety rule in its four-and-a-half years of being in 
office. I mean, this is incredible. So, OSHA is a top enemy, and workplace 
safety rules, of deregulatory people. For instance, last year the Obama 
administration proposed a rule that would have limited—would have put rules in 
place to protect children working on farms. Children that work on farms die at 
six times the rate of children working in other industries. The Obama 
administration, under pressure leading up to the election, withdrew that rule 
and said that they would never submit that rule again during the term of the 
Obama administration. That’s an unprecedented thing. So, obviously, workplace 
safety is one of the things the anti-regulatory people go after the most.

              JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And what about Texas in terms of workplace safety 
compared to other states?

              MIKE ELK: Yeah. Texas, as statistics shows, has the highest rate 
of workplace deaths of any state in the country. And a big part of that can be 
contributed to the fact that it’s one of the most non-union states in the 
country. Quite frankly, no worker is going to speak up and call OSHA. OSHA has 
such a severe limited budget that they typically don’t go and inspect a 
workplace unless they get a phone call from a worker saying there’s a big 
problem. And when you’re scared of losing your job, you’re not going to do 
that. So, places that tend to have less unions tend to have much higher rates 
of workplace accidents. And as, you know, the West, Texas, accident showed, 
workplace accidents just don’t hurt workers, they hurt the surrounding 
community, as well.

              AMY GOODMAN: At 6:30 Eastern time this morning, West Mayor Tommy 
Muska said perhaps 60 homes have been damaged, all the nursing home patients 
have been accounted for, and all of downtown West, Texas, has been evacuated. 
Tony Dudik, what are your plans for today?

              TONY DUDIK: Well, I’ve got—it’s starting to rain, so there’s not 
a lot I can do. I also teach here in the Waco area, so I’ve got some teaching 
activities to tend to, and we’re getting close to final exams, so I’ve got to 
take care of that. You know, it’s going to take a couple of days for this to 
sink in. But when it does, it’s going to—it’s going to affect the people in 
this community and in this part of the state. It’s going to shake people to the 
core.

              AMY GOODMAN: And, Jay Hicks, we’re going to follow your—you on 
social media. That’s what you’re in charge of at KWTX-TV in Waco, and we’re 
going to link to your station at democracynow.org. We want to thank you all for 
being with us on this day following this terrible tragedy.

              This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace 
Report. When we come back, we’ll talk about Boston, the Boston Marathon 
bombings. Stay with us.



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