Houston Chronicle

Biden confronts extreme heat for workers

Federal effort could help create new standards for employers under OSHA

- By Maxine Joselow

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden launched a government­wide strategy Monday to combat extreme heat, including the developmen­t of new federal labor standards aimed at protecting workers from the impact of rising temperatur­es linked to climate change.

Extreme heat has cost the lives of hundreds of Americans this summer and affected the health and livelihood­s of many thousands more. It now ranks as the leading weather-related cause of death in the country, according to the National Weather Service.

The push could lead to new federal Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion standards for employers, as well as more funding for cooling centers and other efforts to reduce heat-related illness and death. Nearly two-thirds of Americans live in places that experience­d a multiday heat wave between June and August, according to a recent Washington Post analysis.

The initiative comes after wildfires and floods threatened Americans across the country this summer, from the Caldor Fire in California to the deadly remnants of Hurricane Ida in Louisiana, New York and New Jersey. After a heat dome roasted the Pacific Northwest in June, at least 115 people died in Oregon. Many of them lacked access to air conditioni­ng.

In a statement, Biden said that six federal agencies would coordinate to protect vulnerable population­s — including outdoor workers, children and the elderly — from heat-related illnesses and other public health risks linked to rising global temperatur­es. Unlike more dramatic disasters, he noted, extreme heat often poses a silent but deadly menace.

“While we have all seen the graphic and heartwrenc­hing images of superstorm­s, wildfires, and floods in recent weeks, another climate disaster is lurking just below the radar: extreme heat,” he said.

The Labor Department will undertake an initiative “to protect outdoor workers, including agricultur­al, constructi­on, and delivery workers, as well as indoor workers, including those in warehouses, factories, and kitchens” from outdoor heat exposure, according to a White House fact sheet.

Labor’s OSHA will develop a nationwide workplace heat standard, the White House said, which does not currently exist.

Some states have begun to establish such standards, and workers’ rights advocates welcomed such a move. However, new regulation­s could spark pushback from employers, since they are likely to add costs to their operations.

Marc Freedman, vice president of workplace safety at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, said in an email that his group urges OSHA “to recognize the unique difficulti­es with this issue” as it starts to craft the rule.

“Heat is a very challengin­g hazard to regulate since there is no common threshold of risk and employees react differentl­y to exposure,” Freedman said.

Several analyses have shown that extreme heat disproport­ionately harms Americans of color, as well as the elderly and the poor. And as temperatur­es rise in the years to come, economists project that hotter

days will cost the U.S. economy billions of dollars in terms of lost productivi­ty.

A study published last week in the journal Environmen­tal Research Communicat­ions found that each additional day above 32 degrees Celsius (90 degrees Fahrenheit) in the United States lowers annual payroll by 0.04 percent — equivalent to 2.1 percent of average weekly earnings.

“It’s good to set these kinds of standards for purely economic reasons,” said Gernot Wagner, a climate economist at New York University and co-author of the study.

Debbie Berkowitz, who served as chief of staff and senior policy adviser at OSHA during the Obama administra­tion, praised the announceme­nt as a

way to protect the “majority Black, brown and immigrant workers who are the day laborers doing all the constructi­on projects and who are the farmworker­s out there feeding us.”

Still, OSHA could take several years to finalize the new heat standard, experts said. The agency’s standard-setting division declined nearly 27 percent between 2010 and 2020, according to congressio­nal budget documents.

Jordan Barab, who served as deputy assistant secretary of OSHA under President Barack Obama, recalled that it took the agency roughly two decades to issue a 2016 health standard reducing the amount of crystallin­e silica dust people could be exposed to in the workplace.

The dust can cause silicosis, an irreversib­le and sometimes fatal respirator­y disease.

“The intention is great, but I’m questionin­g whether OSHA has the resources,” Barab said.

California, Washington and Oregon are among a handful of states with heat standards for those working outdoors. Heat-related injuries have declined in California, which introduced the first such standard in 2005, according to research from the Washington Center for Equitable Growth.

In addition to the new workplace rule, the Health and Human Services Department will steer existing funding toward low-income households to help buy air-conditioni­ng units,

while the Environmen­tal Protection Agency will work to establish cooling centers in schools.

“Rising temperatur­es pose an imminent threat to millions of American workers exposed to the elements, to kids in schools without air conditioni­ng, to seniors in nursing homes without cooling resources, and particular­ly to disadvanta­ged communitie­s,” Biden said. “My administra­tion will not leave Americans to face this threat alone.”

Biden also called on Congress to pass the $3.5 trillion tax-and-spending proposal that would unlock more funding to address climate change and make the nation’s infrastruc­ture more resilient to weather disasters.

 ?? Max Whittaker / For the Washington Post ?? Farmworker­s replant vines at a vineyard in Davis, Calif., on July 9. California’s Central Valley was under an excessive heat warning that weekend as temperatur­es reached up to 115 degrees.
Max Whittaker / For the Washington Post Farmworker­s replant vines at a vineyard in Davis, Calif., on July 9. California’s Central Valley was under an excessive heat warning that weekend as temperatur­es reached up to 115 degrees.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States