Sentinel & Enterprise

Workers can organize to push change. reduce workplace dangers

- By Jessica E. Martinez and Marcy Goldstein Gelb Jessica E. Martinez and Marcy Goldstein Gelb are co- executive directors of the National Council for Occupation­al Safety and Health.

Jordan Romero, 28, was struck by a vehicle and died in a trench at a Boston constructi­on site in February 2021. Romero was the father of two young children. They will grow up without him.

Robert Woods, 42, was murdered in 2018 during a robbery at the St. Louis Dollar General store where he worked, leaving behind a grieving daughter. Despite multiple violent incidents at its stores, Dollar General has not taken measures to adequately address security concerns.

Janine Denise Johnson Williams, 50, was one of nine workers who died this past December when a tornado struck Mayfield Consumer Products in Kentucky. She is survived by her husband, four children and 17 grandchild­ren. Five workers at the Mayfield plant say they asked to leave after severe weather alerts but were told to stay or risk being fired.

These three preventabl­e deaths are just a few of those that took place at workplaces recognized as this year’s Dirty Dozen unsafe employers by our organizati­on, the National Council for Occupation­al Safety and Health. Each year we release this list to call attention to egregious actions by companies that put workers and communitie­s at risk.

You may ask: Can employers really prevent a traffic accident, a shooting or a death from a tornado? The answer is yes, yes and yes.

Any competent contractor must safely manage traffic at a constructi­on site. Retail stores have a responsibi­lity to protect employees and customers with safe staffing, security systems and other measures. In an era of climate change, factories and warehouses must have emergency procedures in place for severe weather — and forcing workers to stay on the job can have terrible consequenc­es.

More than 4,700 U. S. workers died from workplace trauma in 2020, the latest year for which data is available. And as many as 95,000 U. S. workers die each year from long-term exposure to toxic hazards including silica and asbestos.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has brought new risks to many workplaces, leading to a huge loss of life. One insurance company reports a 40% increase in deaths of working age Americans, from ages 18 to 64, since the pandemic began.

Indigenous, Black and Latinx people and Pacific Islanders are dying from COVID-19 at far greater rates than white people and Asian Americans. Disparitie­s in access to health care and other resources can mean the difference between life and death.

When workers organize, U. S. employers often respond with brute force, firing a few so the rest are afraid to speak up. The nation’s 11 million undocument­ed workers are especially vulnerable, due to fears that their immigratio­n status will be used against them.

We might hope that unsafe employers would take steps on their own to reduce risks and eliminate hazards. But hope is not a plan. Organizing with coworkers is a much better bet.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States