Posted on Mar 7, 2017
Senate votes to kill worker safety rule aimed at federal contractors
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Posted 8 y ago
Responses: 7
It would be nice if the article gave more details on how companies are "stealing" wages from their employees.
The contractors are not being allowed to injure their employees without admitting responsibility. They are given relief from having to report unfounded allegations and workplace safety "violations" which they contest, prior to adjudication. The company still must report any OSHA findings they do not contest, no longer contest, and those which have been adjudicated against the employer.
It would be analogous to a person being denied a security clearance because someone from their past says "yeah that guy was the biggest pot peddler in my high school", and then finding out he meant the other John Smith in the class of 06.
The contractors are not being allowed to injure their employees without admitting responsibility. They are given relief from having to report unfounded allegations and workplace safety "violations" which they contest, prior to adjudication. The company still must report any OSHA findings they do not contest, no longer contest, and those which have been adjudicated against the employer.
It would be analogous to a person being denied a security clearance because someone from their past says "yeah that guy was the biggest pot peddler in my high school", and then finding out he meant the other John Smith in the class of 06.
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Removing regulation is usually code for removing worker, customer and public protections so the taxpayer in one way or another pays for the fallout. Privatize profit, socialize the risk.
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As a former OSHA Inspector, I can tell you that the "the Fair Pay and Safe Workplaces rule" would not have prevented a single accident. What it would have done is allow government officials to pick and choose who wins or retains government contracts. In other words it would allow politics to intrude on worker safety.
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