The program was designed to help OSHA learn about key areas that will enhance and encourage the efforts of employers, workers and unions to identify and address workplace hazards. The agency asked for feedback about emerging unaddressed health and safety issues, how to improve efforts to engage stakeholder in program and initiatives, and for help in identifying priorities.
Ms. Reinstein, who lost her husband Alan to mesothelioma in 2004 as a result of his exposure to asbestos in the workplace, was joined on the panel by others who had lost loved ones to workplace hazards. Overseeing the panel discussion was David Michaels, Assistant Secretary, OSHA; and Deborah Berkowitz, Chief of Staff, OSHA.
“ADAO urges OSHA to move from helping to control to preventing asbestos exposure, and we urge you to help disseminate other government agencies’ information … to increase awareness and support for best practices and encourage compliance,” Reinstein told the panel. She pointed out that OSHA’s own web site estimates 1.3 million employees in construction and general labor have faced “significant asbestos exposure.”
Reinstein also took the opportunity to ask OSHA’s leaders to support pending legislation that calls for a complete ban of asbestos in the U.S.
“Clearly, one life lost to asbestos disease is tragic, but hundreds of thousands of lives lost is unconscionable,” she said. “OSHA has the opportunity – and the responsibility – to protect Americans from these preventable diseases. We count on you to push this forward, and we would encourage and ask that Secretary (of Labor Hilda L.) Solis support asbestos ban legislation to prevent asbestos-caused diseases to protect workers and their families on behalf of the tens of thousands who have lost their life.”
Transcripts of the meeting are available on the OSHA web site.
A web cast of the meeting, including Panel 1, which features Ms. Reinstein, also is available by visiting OSHA online.
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Tags: ADAO, asbestos, Asbestos Disease Awareness Organization, asbestos exposure, Hilda L. Solis, Linda Reinstein, mesothelioma, Occupational Safety & Health Administration, OSHA, OSHA Listens, Secretary of Labor, Washington, workplace safetyThis entry was postedon Monday, March 15th, 2010 at 12:50 pmand is filed under News.You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.DiggFacebookMySpaceDel.icio.usStumbleUpon --
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