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The Silica Standard: A Case Study of Inequality in Worker Health and Safety Standards

Back in March, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) finalized its long-awaited silica standard, requiring employers to reduce workers' exposure to the toxic, cancer-causing dust so common to construction and fracking sites, among other workplaces. OSHA estimates that the new standard will prevent more than 600 deaths and 900 new cases of silicosis annually. That is certainly commendable, but the kudos would be more heartfelt if the new standard had been adopted decades earlier and if it fully addressed the significant health risks to workers. 

The unconscionable delays and unjustified concessions awarded to industry at the expense of workers' health and safety are hardly unique to the silica standard; rather, they are the product of our broken regulatory process, which is riddled with analytical requirements designed to generate business-friendly outcomes. 

In the case of the silica standard, OSHA set the permissible exposure level (PEL) at 50 micrograms per cubic meter (µg/m3) – the level recommended by the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) in 1974. But despite clear scientific evidence of the significant risks to workers, OSHA took four decades to finalize the rule because of intense industry pressure to stop it. 

Industry leaders hired lobbyists to fight the new standard on the grounds that reducing exposures would be prohibitively expensive to businesses, ignoring the fact that workers and taxpayers have historically paid the costs of these hazards. During this 40-year fight, industry continued business as usual, and working families shouldered the burden of ongoing silica exposure by way of medical expenses, poor quality of life, and emotional distress due to illness or injury – and in thousands of cases, death. 

While the standard is a vast improvement over the status quo, OSHA gave industry some free passes in the final rule, such as deciding not to adopt an exposure limit more protective than 50 µg/m3 on the basis that doing so wouldn't be "technologically feasible." In other words, instead of incentivizing companies to develop new technology to better safeguard workers' health, OSHA chose to set the standard at a level below which significant health risks still exist. The consequence is that the new rule leaves thousands of workers unprotected from exposure to silica at dangerous levels. 

The inequities in this sorry tale of regulatory dysfunction scream out for justice. Odds are that not many C-suite types at construction and fracking companies are suffering from silicosis. Rather, it's the blue-collar workers who are wronged. 

Sadly, the inequities will continue even now that the standard is final. 

In OSHA's 2015 report, Adding Inequality to Injury: The Costs of Failing to Protect Workers on the Job, the agency found that employers regularly evade their responsibility for worker health and safety and that states' workers compensation systems don't provide injured workers the full benefits promised in exchange for giving up their right to file suit against their employers. According to figures cited in the report, "Workers' compensation payments cover only a small fraction (about 21 percent) of lost wages and medical costs of work injuries and illnesses; workers, their families, and their private health insurance pay for nearly 63 percent of these costs, with taxpayers shouldering the remaining 16 percent." 

Workers employed by companies that have "opted out" of their states' workers' compensation system – including many in Texas and Oklahoma – may have even less chance of recovering benefits under their employers' "alternative benefits plans." According to ProPublica's hard-hitting coverage of this issue, these alternative plans "provide lower and fewer payments, make it more difficult to qualify for benefits, control access to doctors and limit independent appeals of benefits decisions." 

Some alternative plans exclude certain workplace injuries, such as occupational exposures (including exposures to silica). In short, the real aim is for companies to pass their costs onto workers and taxpayers (although it is worth noting that over the long-term, passing costs to workers and simultaneously keeping wages extremely low will leave workers without money to reinvest in the marketplace, ultimately driving down supply and demand and damaging the economy). 

As noted at the outset of this post, these inequities are likely to appear in every new worker protection because our regulatory system continually compromises people's health and safety for the benefit of businesses' bottom lines. 

Addressing these inequities will require, at minimum, removing burdensome procedural hurdles from our regulatory system; guarding against undue industry influence at all stages of rulemaking; strengthening our environmental, labor, financial, food, and consumer protection laws to address new and emerging risks; and allocating sufficient resources to the agencies that implement and enforce our laws so they can effectively carry out their missions. These are major reforms, and achieving them will require hard work by lawmakers, government officials, employers, academics, activists, and the public, but they can and must be tackled.

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Katie Tracy | May 19, 2016

The Silica Standard: A Case Study of Inequality in Worker Health and Safety Standards

Back in March, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) finalized its long-awaited silica standard, requiring employers to reduce workers’ exposure to the toxic, cancer-causing dust so common to construction and fracking sites, among other workplaces. OSHA estimates that the new standard will prevent more than 600 deaths and 900 new cases of silicosis annually. […]

Evan Isaacson | May 18, 2016

Renewed Public Investment in Water Infrastructure Promotes Equality

Clean water: We can't take it for granted, as the people of Flint, Michigan, can attest. And they're not alone. In too many communities across the nation, drinking water fails to meet minimum safety standards, forcing consumers to buy bottled water and avoid the stuff coming out of their taps. We cannot say that we […]

James Goodwin | May 17, 2016

Want to Address Economic Inequality? Strengthen the Regulatory System

The growing problem of economic inequality in the United States continues to draw significant attention – and for good reason. By 2011, America’s top 1 percent owned more than 40 percent of the nation’s wealth, and ours ranks as one of the most unequal economies among developed countries. Meanwhile, the median wage rate for workers […]

Rena Steinzor | May 13, 2016

We Need to Get Back to Work

Originally published on RegBlog by CPR Member Scholar Rena Steinzor. Rulemaking has slowed to a crawl throughout the executive branch. If an agency does not have a statutory mandate to undertake such a brutal and resource-intensive process, the choice to accomplish its mission through any other means will be tempting. Of course, if the policy issues are […]

Mollie Rosenzweig | May 12, 2016

Feds Open Criminal Investigation of Dole Listeria Outbreak

The U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) recently launched a criminal investigation of Dole Food Company, continuing a trend of criminal enforcement against those responsible for deadly food safety lapses. The investigation stems from a Listeria outbreak in bagged salad that sickened 33 people, four of whom died.  Between September 2015 and January 2016, 33 people […]

Katie Tracy | May 11, 2016

New Oxfam Report: Poultry Industry Denies Worker Requests for Bathroom Breaks

Can you imagine working for a boss who refuses you the dignity of taking a bathroom break? According to a revealing new report published today by Oxfam America, denial of bathroom breaks is a very real practice at poultry plants across the country, and line workers at these plants often “wait inordinately long times (an […]

Evan Isaacson | May 10, 2016

Trading Away the Benefits of Green Infrastructure

In the world of watershed restoration, there are multiple tools and tactics that government agencies, private landowners, and industry can use to reduce pollution and clean up our waterways. In Maryland, two of those approaches seem destined to collide. On the first track is nutrient trading, a least-cost pollution control concept predicated on the idea […]

James Goodwin | May 9, 2016

New Study Brings ‘Trickle Down’ Illogic to Regulatory ‘Costs’ Estimates

These days, it seems a week doesn’t go by without some conservative advocacy group releasing a new study that purports to measure the total annual costs of federal regulation. In this case, it’s literally true. Last week, the reliably anti-regulatory Competitive Enterprise Institute (CEI) put out its annual tally, provocatively titled “Ten Thousand Commandments,” which […]

Dave Owen | May 5, 2016

The Surprising Evolution of Federal Stream Protections

Originally published on Environmental Law Prof Blog by CPR Member Scholar Dave Owen. Right now, the United States' second-most-heated environmental controversy—behind only the Clean Power Plan—involves the Clean Water Rule, which seeks to clarify the scope of federal regulatory jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act. According to its many opponents, the rule is one big power grab. […]