Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Tuesday, December 8, 2020

UMWA Calls for Immediate Aid from COVID-19








FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

DECEMBER 7, 2020

[TRIANGLE, VA.] United Mine Workers of America (UMWA) International President Cecil E. Roberts issued the following statement today:

          “It is critical that Congress act without delay to pass a COVID relief package that will provide additional unemployment benefits, an additional bar on evictions, aid to state and local governments, extension of a Payroll Support Programs (PSP) for the airline industry, help for small businesses and more. American working families have been waiting for this help since September. There must not be any further delay.

          “Thousands of UMWA members are unemployed right now, both in the coal industry and in other industries. Indeed, by some measures this has been one of the worst years for the coal industry in almost 90 years. Our members did nothing wrong, yet they and their families are hurting.

       “Hopefully their jobs will return as Americans get vaccinated and we begin to work our way out of this pandemic and the economic disaster it has caused. But in the meantime, the help they would receive from an additional $1,200 per month in supplemental unemployment benefits will be a Godsend.

          “As essential workers, the vast majority of UMWA members have been on the job throughout this troubled time. Nearly 300 of our active members have contracted COVID-19, hundreds more of our retirees have as well. Many of them have been hospitalized. Some have passed away. I salute all of them for their perseverance throughout this pandemic, and urge them to continue to stay safe, wear a mask and get the vaccine when it becomes available.

          “I commend those members of Congress who worked in a bipartisan fashion to finally get Congress moving on providing the relief Americans so desperately need. I am especially glad that Senator Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) is one of those spearheading this effort. I know he cares deeply about working families in West Virginia and around the country, as do the others who have contributed to this legislation.

          “Let’s get this done, and done in a way that provides the most relief possible to those who need it while still upholding critical safety and health protections for those who are working.”

                                                                            ### 

Monday, December 7, 2020

EPI report: Unceasing growth of wage inequality undercuts wage growth for the bottom 90% of wage earners

 


Hardworking heroines


The International Labor Office (ILO) has collected data for the first half of 2020 from some countries around the world.
Based on these data, it is stated that 39% of workers globally are women. Furthermore, the ILO notes that half of women are paid at or below the minimum wage.
These figures confirm the positions of the militant trade union movement that speaks of the TRIPLE exploitation of women: at work-home-society.
This unacceptable situation has to end. The hope is in the active participation of women in the life and action of the trade unions. Their election to the governing bodies of the unions and the common struggles of women and men for the end of capitalist exploitation.
This situation is unacceptable in the 21st century!

Friday, December 4, 2020

Neoliberalism is Finished, OSHA’s Time Has Come

 

DECEMBER 4, 2020

Our federal government will either work for us or against us. It won’t be neutral. Now is not the time for hand wringing and worrying what the next administration will or will not do: It’s the time to forward concrete proposals that materially help workers and their families.

“Amtrak Joe” just might rebuild our national passenger and freight system; lower the Medicare age to 60; introduce a Public Option to the ACA; enhance Medicaid; move up the minimum wage to at least $15 an hour; oil & gas regulations in line with Climate demands; environmental climatic changes to deal with California fires and winds; and southern coastal issues to deal with increasing hurricane, tornadoes, rain/wind disasters and other immediate promises.

About 120 years ago Vladimir Lenin published his pamphlet “What is to be done?” It was based on a Russian revolutionary writer Nikolai Chernyshevsky novel. But, that question is often asked in periods of cataclysmic events which can guide and will influence tens of millions of people’s. The question asked: “What is to be Done?”

We currently are in such a period in the United States and on the world stage.

As Trump is dumped and we start returning to life as it was — does the defeat of Trump mean that new public policies are proposed that reflect the economic/political/pandemic crisis that is taking place? And that peoples’ everyday working and social demands are expressed by class-oriented trade unions who will promote and fight for them?

We at Labor Today choose the latter path.

The Political Economy of Neoliberalism

Understanding the political economy of neoliberalism as applied to working class conditions is crucial to any hope of serious restoration of a federal role in preventing dangerous life-threatening and killing working conditions.

This starts with documenting the ravages of the federal policies of neoliberalisms:

Anti government privatizations, deregulation and government shrinkages in a period of COVID19 must stop. The period between 1980 and the start of 2020 was bad enough. The scourge of Coronavirus and the demands of the Black Lives Matter movement has escalated the requirement of new and significant policy initiatives.

It’s tempting to include health policy a little, but for now we are focusing on OSHA. MSHA. NIOSH. & related agencies as required.

Pre-1980

Pre 1980 wasn’t a breeze for OSHA

MSHA NIOSH and EPA AND health policy, but there wasn’t a thorough neoliberal ideology behind anti-working class federal government measures.

The country was still enjoying the end of the Vietnam war and the post Nixon impeachment and resignation PTSD period.

Rescuing the legislative intent of OSHA from Nixon Ford administrations was the first step. Newly elected President Jimmy Carter in 1976 hired, under trade union AND medical sciences pressure, qualified people and turn them loose.

After being hired, Dr. Eula Bingham, the new OSHA Director, simply took the legislative intent and fashioned a pro-worker/trade union strategy of federal standards development and enforcement that worked.

In those days the chamber of Commerce was the overarching corporate lobbying power. Pressuring democrat president Jimmy Carter and Congress was their simple strategy.

But it wasn’t enough to just to slow down OSHA in that 1976-80 period.

No, by 1980 corporate/Wall Street American had different ideas. They envisioned a period of time with them in the ascendancy. The then powerful Democratic Party leadership responded, unfortunately they responded in the wrong way.

The 1980 corporate backlash

In 1980, before the US elections, liberal US senators co-authored Senate bill 2153, “ the OSHA Improvement Act of 1980”. It was a bipartisan preneoliberalism signal. It was authorized and Sponsored by Republicans Oren Hatch and Wm Schweiker, and Democrats Harrison Williams and Alan Cranston. It focused on cutbacks in inspections, I.e. deregulation. It would have eliminated 90% of workplaces from routine inspections.

It would have also turned OSHA into a defunct management/ labor “cooperative” enforcement system. That is a dream of anti-union policy makers who simply fear powerful trade unions. Prior to the federal OSHA passage, state-based programs were based on this phoney labor/management enforcement system.

This corporate induced effort fell completely in its face.

A mobilization of trade union activists, probably some from the Eula Bingham inspired “New Directions” training programs, rose up and killed it. A New York Times paid advertisement called for its demise. It was endorsed by a broad trade union list.

But, unfortunately, that was one victory before a stunning row of defeats extending to this day. The victory did save OSHA from legislative changes.

Reagan and Thatcher

This changed, radically in 1980. The newly elected Reagan and Thatcher governments were elected in the US and Britain. That was bad enough.

But it became too very clear that both the British Labour Party and the US Democratic Party would both seek a bipartisanship as allies. They both silently adopted to the previously failed neoliberal attack by objectively making the working class fair game. The guard rails against corporate greed would be deleted.

Reagan election win, after years of Reagan being pictured as a Hollywood buffoon, was taken as sea change in the future of the United States. To this day Reagan’s media reputation remains positive.

The Democrats fell before Reagan and Tony Blair destroyed the once powerful Socialist Labour Party. Both proclaimed the invincibility of these right-wing governments.

Bush(s) and Clinton: 20 years

For workers and their unions, the Bush administrations did their usual and expected Republicans’ part, but then the Clinton administration, in between, followed strict neoliberalism requirements. They had their right-wing Democrat Leadership Council DLC as their tool and their organizational weapon.

Federal welfare policy was a disaster. Killing Policing against mainly Black men became the new federal policies. The US imperialist war on Yugoslavia coupled with the personal Clinton fiascos killed any positive labor law changes. The disastrous neoliberal North American Free Trade NAFTA sailed through Congress with little trade union militant opposition. The Teamsters sounded the alarm, but few listened.

The Promise of 2008

The almost genocidal Bush war on Iraq and surroundings stunned the country. Domestic policy kept its rightward direction. The Republicans had 8 years to do their damage. Then came the next national election.

The overwhelming victory and promises of the 2008 Obama Administration failed from the start. They were scrupulously ruled with neoliberalism and libertarian dictates.

For example, The Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) would have given trade unions a new chance. That indirectly also meant good news for federal legislation of workers regulation. None of that happened. A major promise was broken. Union leadership was stunned, but went away silent.

(We got an insurance company controlled federal health system that only covered a short portion in need: with copays, deductibles and ceilings cost people plenty. Drug companies were still given almost free reign)

Libertarianism Rules the Education

and Regulation Roost

In the period 2008-20016, Cas Sunstein was the most openly aggregious applicator of the privatization-and-no-regulations policies, for example. Sunstein and his wife seemed to run the Obama Administration. Sunstein is a self-proclaimed libertarian. He knew what he was doing. And he did it with a Harvard flair. He may have left after 4 years but the dye was cast. No new federal worker protection regulations. Period

Privatization of public schools into “Charter schools” were the bread winner for DNC contributions. That was Arnie Duncan territory. And they were ruthless. This was a virulently anti-teachers union policy direction.

Competency was replaced with blindly enforcement of neoliberal deregulation.

Heading OSHA, Joe McDermott under Clinton and David Michaels under Obama were both highly competent administrators but the white Houses rejected their regulatory pro-worker policies.

The AFL-CIO safety and health department under both Administrations didn’t stand a chance. It wasn’t their fault. They did their best in saving the legal structures which they did. The laws are still intact. The AFL-CIO is simply not independent of the Democratic Party.

Deadly examples: Neoliberalism Protects cancerous Diesel Exhaust polluter: Detroit Motors et al.

In February 2012 Debra Silverman and NIH colleagues successfully associated Diesel Exhaust (DE) with lung cancer. By June 2012, IARC (International Agency for Research on Cancer), WHO, lowered the DE exposure limit to the same as asbestos. Previously, the ACGIH (American Conference of Government Industrial Hygienist), had already lowered its TLV (Threshold Limit Value) and in 2012 lowered it to the cancer TLV. By June ACGIH lowered their DE TLV to the IARC Recommendation level.

The neoliberal controlled, no-regulation, Democratic Party government’s OSHA administration did not make any moves. The old OSHA rule for DE as a devastatingly dangerous rule stayed in place, and remains there today ,which exposes tens of thousands of workers and exponentially millions of people to deadly DE fumes.

This probably helped and abetted Volkswagen’s criminal actions to fix its emissions on its world-wide VW diesels automobiles and avoid the “DE causes occupational and environmental cancer” label. Keeping diesels under the hope of electrification.

The NIH team also scientifically associated industrial solvents with pancreatic cancer. This was in 2014. Again, no rule-making was started by OSHA.

Given the moribund status of NIOSH, it wasn’t surprising for scientists at NIH to step in their place to protect workers.

Following the 2012 DE findings, Dora Nigro, widow of a New York State MTA bus mechanic, successfully won a NYS Workers’ Compensation case for her diseased husband Tony Nigro. Tony was a proud member of Transport Workers Union Local 100.

A similar workers’ compensation case was filed on behalf of deceased Michael Jerome, a wheel and axle repair worker at the Coney Island overhaul shop, for his pancreatic cancer. That case is pending.

A New Period Has Opened

In a just a few short months a new period of workers related rights will open. Joe Biden has a good chance to significantly change this neoliberal scenario. Three things will present the Democrats with a radically new historical situation:

COVID19

Black Lives Matter

Death and Life of Dr Bingham

The Coronavirus has shown the ravages in the wake of neoliberal federal and state policies. It went from a controllable virus to a pandemic. Privatized public/government health hospitals and a federal government not ready to protect risked all people. Public Hospitals downsized. In New York private non-profit hospitals became self-serving corporate monopolies with service cutbacks. Private equity funds controlled hospital ERs.

The VA hospitals have continued to be defunded over the last 30+ years. This shows the deadly hypocrisy of patriotism.

The Democrats were bad enough with mostly lip service in preparedness, the Republicans starting in 2016 proudly wiped out the lip service.

It’s well documented that the pandemic has rendered Black and Latin people most at risk of dying. Looking toward the future, they are now in worsening conditions. Removing all employee limits from enforcement will be a big step in covering all workers. Now, most regulations don’t cover employment places with fewer that 50 workers. That must be ended. A significant number of Black and Latin workers are employed in those places. They also tend to not have trade union protection.

The Chair of the Federal Reserve recently and widely said the current COVID19 related recession economy will make things much worse for those most at risk, specifically Black and Latin working class people, whether at home or work.

Neoliberalism is a World Wide Pandemic

Internationally, the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) neoliberal monetary policies have destroyed government socioeconomic infrastructure programs across Europe, Asia, Africa and South America. The British NHS and the national health systems In Spain, France, and Italy were decimated by neoliberalist financial cutbacks over the years. Their COVID19 deaths in those countries reflected that. Trade union demonstrations were and are still being held to restore these systems.

In the Western Hemisphere we are now seeing it most clearly in Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Venezuela and the rest of South and central America. Mexico is teetering.

Workers

The workers’ health and safety example of Smithfield slaughter houses, where workers were and are being forced to work with the virus with no ETS (Emergency Temporary Standard) ON INFECTIOUS DISEASES in place have been documented even in the New York Times. This ETS rule was not enacted under Obama either, even though it was in the infamous OSHA pipeline for a couple of years. It never made it to a final actual rulemaking standard. Neoliberalism killed its progress.

That Smithfield is not owned by a US based company, it is a Chinese, wholly-owned subsidiary of WH Foods , as is not JBS, a Brazilian-owned slaughterhouse, only enhances the disastrous neoliberalism trade policies’ point.

The BLM Movement of national and worldwide demonstrations has documented that Black workers and families/communities face the harshest working and living conditions and therefore require the strongest federal OSHA, EPA And RELATED federal protection Standards and Enforcement.

All workers must be covered, not just those in places of 50 or more workers.

Eula Bingham: pre-neoliberalism examples

The recent death of our heroine presents a multitude of actions that her life at Department of Labor shows we can run with. Never settling for plaudits, I’m sure she would want her accomplishments highlighted in new actual programs. It’s not complicated.

Strong standard setting: The asbestos, lead, cotton dust and BCME standards, and other NIOSH Generated rule-making under Bingham’s tenure are significant examples. Dr. Tony Robbins was NIOSH Director with a highly qualified set of researchers to prepare hazards for rule-making.

Enforcement was in high gear. Hundreds of newly marshaled enforcement officers were hired, trained and sent out to enforce the law. The playbook was simple: respond to all worker and trade union complaints. They utilized the range of violations: non-serious, serious, repeated and willful. Appropriate strong fines were imposed.

Employers were crying. Corporate elites were in stitches fearing losing their grip. The Chamber of Commerce was making regular White House visits.

Why? OSHA inspectors were responding to worker and union complaints. The law was being enforced. A new wrinkle must be adopted, in addition to reemployment of federal Marshall inspectors. That is, all workers regardless of size of establishment should be covered, not just those with over 10 or 50 workers.

“New Directions” federal money for training and education was a great Bingham innovation. Federal grants were given to non-profit and appropriate educational institutions. It is now once again desperately needed.

You get the picture.

I believe Eula would love her death to be a springboard to a “Back to the Future” regeneration of a strong government role using our tax dollars to protect us and not the Billionaires. Bernie’s call to arms.

And, now with the COVID19 public health crisis and the powerful street-based BLM movement ,the imperative to cover ALL workers is paramount.

For example, When Dr. Bingham, working with Dr. Jeanne Stellman, lowered the proposed lead standard to cover all women including those in birthing years, the precedent had been established.

Immediately OSHA adopting the TLVs of the ACGIH AND the IARC rules would be a good start.

A recent shallow thin New York Times top editorial ”OSHA IS AWOL” is the height of hypocrisy given the Times promotion of Democratic Party neoliberal policies that created our current situation. They barely mentioned standard setting and standard enforcement.

I can only hope that the single payer/Medicare for All movement moves closer to a National Health Service that the COVID19 proved we need and must have. Elimination of all private hospitals, whether they be for profit or so called not for profit, is called for. Again the BLM movement must remain our enforcement apparatus.

Can a Biden Do It?

Biden is similar to FDR. Both started off as conservatives. Biden could flower into more radical policies given our times. Remember in the 1932 election a widely discredited Herbert Hoover still received 39% of the vote.

Biden’s VP choice Kamala Harris is important. She understands law enforcement. His selection of a Black woman with politics as good as Henry Wallace who became the VP in 1940 is optimistic.

Anything is possible if it’s fought for.

Yes!

Frank Goldsmith has a PhD from Columbia University’s School of Public Health; taught at Stonybrook, HSC, State University of New York; Transport Workers Union, Local 100, Director, Occupational Health 2000-2018; Current: Labor Today, Associate & International Editor; World Federation of Trade Unions, North American Coordinator. {https://labortoday.us}

FRANK GOLDSMITH

Neoliberalism is Finished, OSHA’s Time Has Come

A unique training on workers’ rights on Saturday, January 23 at 1:00 PM on Zoom.

 

The Northwest Workers’ Justice Project and the Marion-Polk-Yamhill Central Labor Chapter, AFL-CIO to offer a training on workers’ rights on Saturday, January 23 at 1:00 PM

The Northwest Workers’ Justice Project (NWJP) and the Marion-Polk-Yamhill Central Labor Chapter, AFL-CIO (MPYCLC) are partnering to provide working people in the Marion-Polk-Yamhill counties region with a unique training on workers’ rights on Saturday, January 23 at 1:00 PM on Zoom. The session is free and will acquaint working people with some of the basics of our rights at work and how to best use these rights. Women, people of color, and young people are especially welcome. The training is intended for people who are not yet represented by unions, but union members who attend can expect to learn much as well. Please fill out this form: https://forms.gle/a7tNDcZ9AcpfargK6 to participate, or connect with the MPYCLC at mpyclc@gmail.com, rjrossi55@gmail.com, or chris@oraflcio.org in order to participate or with questions.

The MPYCLC is thrilled to welcome NWJP staff attorney Lizeth Marin and NWJP Campaigns Coordinator and attorney Kate Suisman to this project. They bring years of experience and a base of knowledge that workers in our region need. The training will touch on or cover the following topics:

· wage issues

· retaliation

· sick leave laws

· relevant COVID-related benefits/leave issues (depending on what is happening when we give the training)

· health and safety rights

Participants will be encouraged to connect with a union, support and work with the NWJP, and remain in contact with the MPYCLC after the training. This training is a first step in knowing and using our rights at work and putting people before profits in our region.

If you intend to participate, please connect with us through one of the e-mail addresses above right away. Our community partners are also helping us build this effort through social media. Additional trainings will be arranged if there is interest.

Whether you intend to participate or not, please check out the NWJP’s website at http://nwjp.org/ and please “like” the NWJP and the Marion Polk Yamhill Central Labor Chapter on Facebook.

WFTU announcement on International Day of Persons with Disabilities

 03 Dec 2020




On the occasion of the International Day of Persons with Disabilities on December 3, the World Federation of Trade Unions reiterates its support and solidarity with people with special needs and supports their demand for free, public and high quality healthcare which become even more urgent during the Pandemic of COVID-19.

In the current circumstances of the Pandemic, the disabled and the chronically ill were seriously  affected, since the problems in various structures, such as Special Schools, Rehabilitation Centers and accommodation structures are magnified due to understaffing. With inadequate protection measures  which expose workers and patients to serious risks. With patients excluded from necessary medical examinations, after the public Health System was turned into health system of “one disease” in most of the countries.

This situation is added to lower participation in education and higher rates of unemployment and poverty  the disabled persons suffer from. Now it is time for workers all over the world to  strengthen our struggle for the protection and improvement of living conditions of the persons with disabilities. We demand:

  • Prevention of the disability
  • Access to free, public and high quality health and rehabilitation services for people with disabilities
  • Immediate opening of new structures. Especially during the Pandemic, it is very dangerous for the structures to accommodate big number of guests.  At the same time the severely disabled, chronically ill and elderly, who are currently alone in their homes, must also be accommodated
  • All the necessary protection measures against COVID-19 in Special Education Centers and Institutions
  • Employment for all persons with disabilities who are able to work under state responsibility
  • Benefits and pensions that can assure them a dignified life

 Τhe Secretariat


Thursday, December 3, 2020

To Travel Agencies and Tourism Workers:

 

SIMAMEVIP/FECTRANS cannot but express concern about the situation that lives in the travel agency sector, taking into account that there are thousands of workers who are losing or on the verge of losing their jobs and seeing reductions in their income. Trade union intervention is in the defense of rights and interests of those who work as employees.

We do not ignore the concrete reality of the sector, in which small companies proliferate, in which the owners/workers of the same, also go through enormous uncertainties. As for the future, the support negotiated between the Confederation of Tourism is not enough of which APAVT is a part and the government, a good part of which are channeled to the large companies in the sector, which previously argued that less state was needed, but that now do not stop claiming great support from the (less)State.

SIMAMEVIP/FECTRANS understands that the solutions of the sector cannot pass for requiring more sacrifices to workers, particularly with the extension of the "lay-off" that has reduced the income of those who work and transferred the costs of companies to the Social Security/State.

Government measures must be implemented throughout the sector and must also be channelled to safeguard workers' employment and income. This is a sector that has generated huge profits in recent years, they say, with 15% for GDP in 2019, but unfortunately workers in the sector did not have this growth in wages, even in any negotiation process, which if were difficulties.

The path is the organization of workers around SIMAMEVIP/FECTRANS together we intervene in the defense of those who work in travel and tourism agencies.

We have never been offered anything. It has always been the workers, through their
trade union organizations that have won their social and labor rights, which today
continue to have.

IN THE UNITY OF THE WORKERS IS
THE STRENGTH OF THE UNION!
The Management of SIMAMEVIP / FECTRANS

Oregon OSHA’s COVID rule is now in force

 

On Nov. 16, a temporary Oregon OSHA rule took effect—to protect workers from COVID-19 in all workplaces. The rule will remain in effect until at least May 4, 2021. But it’s not clear how many employers or workers know about it. It’s like the proverbial tree falling in the forest: If OSHA announces a rule and no one hears about it, does it protect workers?

OSHA has no way to let Oregon’s roughly 110,000 employers and 1.8 million workers know about the new rule except media reports. SAIF, Oregon’s biggest workers’ comp insurer, emailed all its employer customers about the rule, but an OSHA spokesperson couldn’t say whether other insurers had done so.

COVID-19 has killed 247,000 Americans, and it’s clear a major upsurge is under way, making COVID-19 a potential on-the-job hazard. As of Nov. 12, the Oregon Health Authority was reporting active outbreaks of at least 5 confirmed cases at 90 Oregon workplaces, as well as active outbreaks with at least three confirmed cases at 75 assisted living centers.


BECOME A COVID STEWARD

Here’s how you can keep yourself, your co-workers and family members safe:

1Know the rules (below).

2If your employer isn’t following the rules, you —or your union steward or staff rep— should let them know about the rules.

3If they still don’t follow the rules, file a complaint online at osha.oregon.gov/workers or by calling 1-800-922-2689. You can ask that your identity be kept confidential. Employer retaliation for making an OSHA complaint is illegal.


It’s Oregon law now: Your employer must keep you safe

  • Physical distancing Whenever feasible, workers must be separated from one another and other individuals by at least 6 feet.
  • Face covering  Indoors (or outdoors when workers must be within 6 feet) employers must provide face coverings to all workers and ensure they use them.
  • Risk assessment With participation from employees, employers must gauge potential exposure and address how to minimize it. See the form here.
  • Notification Workers should let employers know if they have a cough, shortness of breath, fever, etc., and employers must notify workers within 24 hours if they learn of a workplace COVID-19 exposure.

WFTU Secretariat statement on the passing of Ramón Cardona Nuevo

 




  It is with deep sadness that the world family of the WFTU says goodbye to its committed militant, comrade Ramon Cardona Nuevo.

Comrade Ramon carried out his tasks with diligence, efficiency and tirelessness in favor of the international trade union movement in every corner of the planet.

A trade union cadre of the heroic CTC, member of the WFTU Secretariat from 2000 to 2011, permanent representative of the WFTU to the ILO for six years, head of the WFTU Office in Geneva, Switzerland and then head of the Regional Office of the WFTU in Latin America and the Caribbean.

He has stood out for his internationalism and his faith in the ideals of the Working Class, as well as for the defense of the Cuban Revolution.

As a leader and cadre of the WFTU, he has given great and successful battles within international organizations, during a period when the world correlation of forces was negative for the peoples and workers. He supported the militant renewal and reconstruction of the WFTU, being one of the first to offer all his strength to the new path of the WFTU which started at the 15th World Trade Union Congress, held in Havana, in December 2005.

We express our sincerest and deepest condolences to his family and the CTC.

His photo will be placed in the meeting room of the WFTU Secretariat.

Soon we will collectively decide on the tribute he deserves.

He will always be remembered.

Tuesday, December 1, 2020

Cal/OSHA Emergency Regulations to Protect Workers from COVID-19 in Effect

 


News Release No.: 2020-99                                        Date: December 1, 2020

Sacramento—Cal/OSHA’s emergency regulations requiring employers to protect workers from hazards related to COVID-19 are now in effect, following their approval yesterday by the Office of Administrative Law.

 

“These are strong but achievable standards to protect workers. They also clarify what employers have to do to prevent workplace exposure to COVID-19 and stop outbreaks,” said Cal/OSHA Chief Doug Parker.

 

The emergency standards apply to most workers in California not covered by Cal/OSHA’s Aerosol Transmissible Diseases standard. The regulations require that employers implement a site-specific written COVID-19 prevention program to address COVID-19 health hazards, correct unsafe or unhealthy conditions and provide face coverings. When there are multiple COVID-19 infections or outbreaks at the worksite, employers must provide COVID-19 testing and notify public health departments. The regulations also require accurate recordkeeping and reporting of COVID-19 cases.

 

As emergency standards, these regulations become effective immediately.

 

“We understand the need to educate and assist employers as they implement the new provisions of the emergency standards,” Parker noted. “For employers who need time to fully implement the regulations, enforcement investigators will take their good faith efforts to implement the emergency standards into consideration. However, aspects such as eliminating hazards and implementing testing requirements during an outbreak are essential.”

 

Cal/OSHA has posted FAQs and a one-page fact sheet on the regulation, as well as a model COVID-19 prevention program. Employers are invited to participate in training webinars held by Cal/OSHA’s Consultation Services branch.

 

Cal/OSHA will convene a stakeholder meeting in December that will include industry and labor representatives to review the requirements of the emergency regulation and solicit feedback and recommend updates.

 

Cal/OSHA helps protect workers from health and safety hazards on the job in almost every workplace in California. Employers and workers who have questions or need assistance with workplace health and safety programs can call Cal/OSHA’s Consultation Services Branch at 800-963-9424.

Complaints about workplace safety and health hazards can be filed confidentially with Cal/OSHA district offices.

 

Members of the press may contact Erika Monterroza or Frank Polizzi at (510) 286-1161, and are encouraged to subscribe to get email alerts on DIR’s press releases or other departmental updates.

 

# # #

Bolsonaro is defeated in the municipal elections of Brazil

 


By Nivaldo Santana

CTB International Relations Secretary 


On November 15 (1st round), Brazilian voters chose the mayors, vice-mayors and councilors of the country's 5,570 municipalities. In all, 67,800 elective public positions were filled. The second round of the elections, on November 29, involved 57 of the 95 Brazilian municipalities that have more than 200 thousand inhabitants. The Brazilian federative system is divided into 26 states and the Federal District. The base is the municipalities in which the new mayors and councilors were chosen. A preliminary assessment of the elections confirms the view that President Bolsonaro's popularity is declining. His poor performance in combating the Covid-19 pandemic, the economic crisis, unemployment and his anti-democratic practices erode his political prestige. To some extent, it can be said that Trump's defeat in the United States and the advance of popular democratic forces in Bolivia and Chile also create a more favorable environment for the opposition. In this context, the vast majority of candidates supported by Bolsonaro suffered important defeats. This is the first positive aspect of the electoral process. Another important fact was the defeat of parties and candidates who deny political activity and pose themselves as true outsiders. In the 2018 presidential elections, who brought Bolsonaro to power, dozens of leaders were elected with the discourse of denial of the political system, institutions and the democratic rule of law. Two years later, these hypocritical speeches were not successful and were rejected by the population. If the extreme right was a defeat, which is a consensus among the vast majority of analysts, the truth is that the liberal and center right parties were the main beneficiaries of the discredit of the Bolsonaro government. The main city halls and the largest number of councilors were in the hands of conservative parties, adepts of economic neoliberalism, averse to labor and social demands. The difference, however, is that these political forces respect the democratic rule of law and do not agree with the coup dictators of the Bolsonaro government and its followers. The left and the democratic opposition, although they were not the main winners of the elections, managed to stop the fascist tsunami that has plagued the country in the past two years and have placed themselves as relevant protagonists of the Brazilian political process. After the coup that led to the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff and the victory of Jair Bolsonaro in the 2018 presidential elections, the Brazilian left achieved important political gains in the elections and is accredited to play a large role in the 2022 general elections. The Communist Party of Brazil, in particular, performed similarly to the other left parties. The votes and victories achieved were below the established goals, mainly due to the large and restrictive changes in the electoral legislation and the difficulties in campaigning amid the serious pandemic that is plaguing the country. In the country as a whole, PCdoB elected 46 mayors and more than 700 councilors. In the city of Porto Alegre, capital of Rio Grande do Sul, the PCdoB candidate, Manuela D’Ávila, had an exceptional performance and did not reach victories by a small margin. The next challenges for the PCdoB, based on a careful evaluation of the elections, successes and also the shortcomings, is to prepare for the great battles underway. The main line is the quest to build a broad unity of political and social forces to defeat the Bolsonaro government and open a new route for economic development with sovereignty, democracy and appreciation of work.