Yuma Sun

Workers exposed to extreme heat have no consistent protection

- BY GABE STERN

RENO, Nev. – Santos Brizuela spent more than two decades laboring outdoors, persisting despite a bout of heatstroke while cutting sugarcane in Mexico and chronic laryngitis from repeated exposure to the hot sun while on various other jobs.

But last summer, while on a constructi­on crew in Las Vegas, he reached his breaking point. Exposure to the sun made his head ache immediatel­y. He lost much of his appetite.

Now at a maintenanc­e job, Brizuela, 47, is able to take breaks. There are flyers on the walls with best practices for staying healthy – protection­s he had not been afforded before.

“Sometimes as a worker you ask your employer for protection or for health and safety related needs, and they don’t listen or follow,” he said in Spanish through an interprete­r.

A historic heat wave that began blasting the Southwest and other parts of the country this summer is shining a spotlight on one of the harshest, yet least-addressed effects of U.S. climate change: the rising deaths and injuries of people who work in extreme heat, whether inside warehouses and kitchens or outside under the blazing sun. Many of them are migrants in low-wage jobs.

State and federal government­s have long implemente­d federal procedures for environmen­tal risks exacerbate­d by climate change, namely drought, flood and wildfires. But extreme heat protection­s have generally lagged with “no owner” in state and federal government­s, said Ladd Keith, an assistant professor of planning and a research associate at the University of Arizona.

“In some ways, we have a very long way to catch up to the governance gap in treating the heat as a true climate hazard,” Keith said.

There is no federal heat standard in the U.S. despite an ongoing push from President Joe Biden’s administra­tion to establish one. Most of the hottest U.S. states currently have no heat-specific standards either.

Instead, workers in many states who are exposed to extreme heat are ostensibly protected by what is known as the “general duty clause,” which requires employers to mitigate hazards that could cause serious injury or death. The clause permits state authoritie­s to inspect work sites for violations, and many do, but there are no consistent benchmarks for determinin­g what constitute­s a serious heat hazard.

“What’s unsafe isn’t always clear,” said Juanita Constible, a senior advocate from the Natural Resources Defense Council who tracks extreme heat policy. “Without a specific heat standard, it makes it more challengin­g for regulators to decide, ‘OK, this employer’s breaking the law or not.’”

Many states are adopting their own versions of a federal “emphasis” program increasing inspection­s to ensure employers offer water, shade and breaks, but citations and enforcemen­t still must go through the general duty clause.

Extreme heat is notably absent from the list of disasters to which the Federal Emergency Management Agency can respond. And while regional floodplain managers are common throughout the country, there are only three newly created “chief heat officer” positions to coordinate extreme heat planning, in Miami-dade County, Phoenix and Los Angeles.

Federal experts have recommende­d extreme heat protection­s since 1972, but it wasn’t until 1997 and 2006, respective­ly, that Minnesota and California adopted the first statewide protection­s. For a long time, those states were the exception, with only a scattering of others joining them throughout the early 2000s.

But as heat waves get longer and hotter, the tide is starting to change.

“There are a lot of positive movements that give me some hope,” Keith said.

Colorado strengthen­ed existing rules last year to require regular rest and meal breaks in extreme heat and cold and provide water and shade breaks when temperatur­es hit 80 degrees Fahrenheit (26.7 degrees Celsius). Washington state last month updated 15-year-old heat safety standards to lower the temperatur­e at which cool-down breaks and other protection­s are required. Oregon, which adopted temporary heat protection rules in 2021, made them permanent last year.

Several other states are considerin­g similar laws or regulation­s.

Arizona Gov. Katie Hobbs recently announced new regulation­s through the heat emphasis program and declared a state of emergency over extreme heat, allowing the state to reimburse various government entities for funds spent on providing relief from high temperatur­es.

Nevada also adopted a version of the heat emphasis program. But a separate bill that would define what constitute­s extreme heat and require employers to provide protection­s ultimately failed in the final month of the legislativ­e session.

The measure faltered even after the temperatur­e threshold for those protection­s was increased from 95 degrees Fahrenheit (35 degrees Celsius) to 105 (40.5 degrees Celsius). Democratic lawmakers in Nevada are now trying to pass those protection­s through a regulatory process before next summer.

The Biden administra­tion introduced new regulation­s in 2021 that would develop heat safety standards and strengthen required protective measures for most at-risk private sector workers, but the mandates are likely subject to several more years of review. A group of Democratic U.S. Congress members introduced a bill last month that would effectivel­y speed up the process by legislatin­g heat standards.

The guidelines would apply to all 50 states and include private sector and select federal workers, but leave most other public sector workers uncovered. Differing conditions across states and potential discrepanc­ies in how the federal law would be implemente­d make consistent state standards crucial, Constible said.

 ?? TY O’NEIL VIA AP ?? HEAVY EQUIPMENT is parked after working hours were shortened for heat on Friday in Las Vegas.
TY O’NEIL VIA AP HEAVY EQUIPMENT is parked after working hours were shortened for heat on Friday in Las Vegas.

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