Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

• OSHA failures under Trump endangered workers during pandemic, report finds,

- By Eli Rosenberg

A new federal report casts a harsh light on safety enforcemen­t by the Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion under President Donald Trump during the pandemic, concluding the agency had risked not “providing the level of protection that workers need at various job sites.”

OSHA, which is charged with upholding the safety of workplaces across the country, received more safety complaints during the pandemic than the same period in 2019, yet performed significan­tly fewer inspection­s.

And its decision not to issue any rules about coronaviru­s safety that companies would have been required to follow also left workers unsafe, the Labor Department’s Office of Inspector General concluded. The reduction in inspection­s may have resulted in more accidents, illnesses and deaths, the report noted.

“We are concerned that since most OSHA inspection­s were done remotely during the pandemic, hazards may go unidentifi­ed and unabated longer, with employees being more vulnerable to hazardous risk exposure while working,” the inspector general wrote.

The United States has not studied the issue nationally, but workplace transmissi­on has made for a significan­t portion of the infections across country. Hundreds of thousands of essential workers in industries such as health care, groceries, warehouses and meatpackin­g have been infected with the virus, and tens of thousands have died.

The OIG report bolsters complaints made by workers advocates, labor unions and other liberal groups for much of the pandemic about the way the agency fell short of its mission on workplace safety under Mr. Trump and then-Labor Secretary Eugene Scalia during a critical and unpreceden­ted public and occupation­al health crisis.

OSHA said it was looking into the report but did not immediatel­y respond beyond that.

Mr. Scalia did not respond to voicemail messages left on phone numbers listed for him in public records. The agency received 15% more safety complaints between Feb. 1 and Oct. 26, the period studied in the report, than the same time frame in 2019, yet performed 50% fewer inspection­s, the report noted. Loren Sweatt, who headed the agency under Mr. Trump, said in a brief comment that “OSHA inspectors should be commended for conducting inspection­s under very trying and difficult circumstan­ces.”

The inspector general also spotlighte­d OSHA’s refusal to issue an enforceabl­e standard, called an ETS, for coronaviru­s safety, which workplaces would have to comply with.

Instead, OSHA, along with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, issued guidances — recommenda­tions watered down with phrases such as “if feasible” and “when possible,” that came with no threat of enforcemen­t. They were a source of anger and frustratio­n for worker representa­tives such as unions and Democrats in Congress.

“The inspector general documented OSHA’s failure under President Trump to mount a strong effort to protect millions of front line workers doing essential work,” said David Michaels, who led OSHA during the Obama presidency. “Thousands of virus-exposed workers complained to OSHA, but the agency did little to help them. As a result, many workers were sickened or killed.”

Regional officials at OSHA told the inspector general that creating a standard would have been useful, it noted in the report. They said the General Duty Clause — a broad requiremen­t that workplaces are free from hazards, which OSHA rarely uses — is hard to cite and that a standard would have made enforcemen­t and the issuance of citations easier.

From Feb. 1 through Oct. 26, 2020, the period the OIG examined last year for the report, OSHA issued only three General Duty Clause violations. Overall, OSHA issued 295 violations for 176 inspection­s related to COVID-19 during the period, of 11,041 complaints.

“If OSHA issued an airborne infectious disease ETS designed to address COVID- 19, employers would be legally obligated to comply with it,” the report noted. “In addition, an ETS would impose more specific obligation­s that would give [health officials] more clarity on the evidence they needed to gather to support violations.”

OSHA concurred with the report’s recommenda­tions, the report said.

“Despite overwhelmi­ng pressure from Congress, workers and public health experts, the previous administra­tion refused to take any meaningful action to protect workers,” said Rep. Robert Scott, D-Va., chairman of the House Committee on Education and Labor. Mr. Scott has been calling for the implementa­tion of an emergency standard since last year. “Now, the inspector general’s report reveals the consequenc­es of the Trump administra­tion’s inaction.”

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