
The Bush admin is on its way out and strict workplace toxicity regulations may be going with it. Political appointees at the Department of Labor, in response to long-standing business concerns that the “government overestimates the risk posed by exposure to chemicals,” covertly proposed new regulations that would make it “tougher to regulate workers’ on-the-job exposure to chemicals and toxins," yesterday’s Washington Post unveiled.
One of the arguments proffered by proponents of the new regs is that the department’s current assumption of a 45-year working life overstates the risk of exposure to workplace toxins. Because, you know, who hangs around a job for 45 years anymore?
But here’s the rub: in some industries, it takes far less than 45 years of exposure to a toxin to develop a debilitating disease. For example, a recent Center report on the health risks of manganese fumes highlighted the stories of welders like Jeffrey Tamraz and Charles Ruth III, both of whom developed parkinsonism, a Parkinson’s-like disease. Each was under 50 when he was diagnosed. Presumably neither started work at age five.
Meanwhile, the Center obtained court documents showing $12.5 million paid by welding companies to 25 organizations and 35 researchers, “virtually all of whom have published papers dismissing connections between welding fumes and workers’ ailments.”
And still missing from this particular debate is the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health’s “official verdict on manganese and welding — an exhaustive state-of-the-science report that will lay the pathway for government regulators.” The report is more than four years overdue.
Next entry: Divine Intervention Redux
Previous entry: The Manhattan Connection



The Daily Watchdog, Election '08, President Obama, Environmental Protection Agency, Politics, politics, Government Accountability Office, Energy, Coal Ash, Environment, U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Public I Podcast, Federal Election Commission, Justice Department, Defense Department, Tennessee, Alabama, Bill Buzenberg, John Murtha, Iraq

Receive important updates by e-mail.

Subscribe to our e-mail newsletter and get the latest from our in-depth investigations, articles, interviews, blogs, videos, and more.

Your support will help us bring you more investigations, articles, interviews and news related materials relevant to U.S. politics and politics abroad.

The Center for Public Integrity is dedicated to producing original, responsible investigative journalism on issues of public concern in the USA and around the world.

The Center’s International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) is a collaboration of some of the world’s leading investigative reporters. ICIJ extends globally the Center’s style of watchdog journalism, working with 100 reporters in 50 countries to produce long-term, transnational projects.
Comments