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65 Arrested Outside White House in Keystone Pipeline Protests 
Lee-Anne Goodman, The Canadian Press 
Lee-Anne Goodman reports: "US President Barack Obama wasn't around to see
it, but 65 protesters were arrested Saturday as they participated in a
peaceful protest outside the White House aimed at pressuring him to block
TransCanada's controversial Keystone XL pipeline. Bill McKibben, a leading
American environmentalist and one of the organizers of the two-week protest,
was among those arrested. Others included gay rights activist Dan Choi; Jane
Hamsher, the founder of the popular liberal blog Firedoglake; and Gus Speth,
a onetime environmental expert under former president Jimmy Carter." 
 
<http://lists.readersupportednews.org/ss/link.php?M=49985&N=683&C=3bac3d6053
ff2785137f023054505d7b&L=928> READ MORE

* * *

 

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2011/08/18-1


Washington's Anti-Regulatory Crusade, and Why Your Job Hasn't Killed You Yet


by Michelle Chen <http://www.commondreams.org/michelle-chen>  

In
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/11837/perrynomics_and_the_crusade
_against_regulation/>  These Times: August 18, 2011

On the campaign trail, Republican presidential hopeful Rick Perry is
spreading the gospel of Perrynomics
<http://blog.chron.com/partisangridlock/2011/06/how-rick-perry-created-all-t
hose-jobs/> -a magical job-creation formula based on minimal government
regulation of industry, combined with tiny tax rates and tight controls on
lawsuits. In a state that seems inclined to cannibalize its own government
<http://www.texastribune.org/immigration-in-texas/immigration/uttt-poll-an-a
nti-immigrant-anti-government-mood/> , this agenda plays well. But a closer
look reveals the high price of low regulation.

In recent months, politicians in both parties, including the White House,
have claimed that scaling back regulations
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/entry/6880/will_obamas_campaign_against
_red_tape_unravel_the_safety_net/>  would unleash economic growth,
suggesting that businesses should be liberated from rules that protect the
environment, occupational health and other public interests. But a new
<http://www.citizen.org/regulations-at-work-report>  analysis by Public
Citizen presents a few unsung gems of federal bureaucracy that help keep us
happy, healthy and sane. Several of these regulatory chart-toppers, not
surprisingly, were enacted in defiance of heavy political pushback:

Clearing the Air. Since the days of the Lowell mills, so-called "brown
<http://www.uml.edu/Media/News%20Articles/article58.html>  lung" has been a
hallmark of the miserable toil of poorly ventilated, dust-clogged textile
factories. The disease, also known as Byssinosis, has historically hit women
especially hard, spreading its signature coughing and lung scarring to
thousands of workers around the world. The epidemic was virtually ignored
until the 1960s and 1970s. Then came
<http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/cottondust/index.html>  OSHA's 1978 rule requiring
more lung-friendly machinery, and within a few years the prevalence of brown
lung in the industry fell by an estimated 97 percent. And employers'
grumbling about the "costs" of the rule faded when it became clear that the
reforms improved the industry's efficiency as well.

Rule of (Keeping Your) Thumb. You'd think a rule that helps keep workers
from getting accidentally hacked to pieces would be somewhat popular. But in
the late 1980s, the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) didn't mind
sacrificing a few extremities here and there to resist the evils of
regulatory "burdens." Industry moguls sued to block the Lockout/Tagout rule
<http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/controlhazardousenergy/index.html> , which would
force employers to mark potentially hazardous equipment with colored tags
and provide safety training for workers. But the rule passed, and according
to Public Citizen, made the shop floor a much less terrifying place:

An analysis of two union databases conducted in 2000 showed that hazardous
energy-related fatalities declined, depending on the industry, by between 30
percent and 55 percent in the years following the enactment of the
Lockout/Tagout rule.... OSHA currently estimates that the regulation
prevents a total of 50,000 injuries and 120 fatalities per year.

Even NAM eventually backed off its opposition to the rule, apparently
recognizing that workers do a better job when they have all their fingers.

Caves not Graves. OSHA issued safety
<http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/trenchingexcavation/index.html>  standards for
excavacation-related construction in 1989, designed to protect workers from
subterranean collapse. Basic structural protections for trenching and
excavation worksites have since become standard practice, and Public Citizen
calculates that the reforms correlate with "a 40 percent decrease in the
fatality rate."

Fire on the Prairie. A generation ago, America's farming industry was
booming, in a really bad way. Grain facilities like silos and grain
elevators were prone to deadly explosions when combustible grain dust mixed
with hazardous gases. In spite of initial opposition from agribusiness
groups and Reagan administration officials, OSHA enacted the Grain
<http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/grainhandling/index.html>  Handling Facilities
Standard, which established environmental controls for dust and gas and
required protective gear for workers. After seeing a "95 percent drop in
explosion-related fatalities for certain facilities," reports Public
Citizen, even industry groups eventually had to admit that workplaces that
don't spontaneously explode are good for business.

Coal Quagmire. Despite major strides in workplace health and safety over the
years, weak regulations and shoddy enforcement still plague various sectors.
Public Citizen points to a dramatic reduction in coal mine-related deaths
since Congress passed the Mine Safety and Health Act of 1969
<http://www.msha.gov/MSHAINFO/MSHAINF2.HTM> , which the group describes as
"the first comprehensive mine safety law creating mandatory inspection
requirements, enforceable health and safety standards, and civil and
criminal penalties for willful violations."

But although Big Coal's underground empire has become less lethal, the many
workers who perished in the West Virginia Massey mine tragedy more than a
year ago are a testament to the dangers that still loom over workers every
day. Politician's promises to strengthen mine worker protections have faded
in recent months
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/04/04/mine-disaster-one-year-la_n_844724
.html> , and Massey Energy's sordid environmental and safety
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jeff-biggers/tip-of-iceberg-of-masseys_b_5298
46.html>  record has so far not compelled decisive action to prevent future
disasters.

As industrial criminality mounts, protecting workers and the public from
harm remains unfinished business. Yet Rick Perry
<http://www.npr.org/blogs/itsallpolitics/2011/08/13/139603925/perry-jumps-in
to-presidential-race-touting-texas-job-growth>  and his Beltway brethren
continue to preach their anti-regulatory gospel, peddling the fable that we
will somehow get more jobs if the institutions that keep us safe, can't do
their jobs.

C 2011 In These Times

 <http://www.commondreams.org/michelle-chen> Michelle Chen

Michelle Chen is a contributing editor at In These Times. She is a regular
contributor to the labor rights blog Working In These
<http://www.inthesetimes.com/working/>  Times, Colorlines.com
<http://colorlines.com/> , and Pacifica's WBAI
<http://wbai.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=424&Itemid=141> .
Her work has also appeared in Alternet, Ms. Magazine, Newsday, and her old
zine, cain.

more Michelle Chen <http://www.commondreams.org/michelle-chen>  

 

 

 

 

 

 



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