“Since the passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act in 1970, thousands of lives have been saved. But too many people still die at work and millions more become injured or sick,” said Woolsey, chairwoman of the House Subcommittee on Workforce Protections. “This administration has a dismal record on health and safety. OSHA has fallen down on its job and turned its back on workers. With this bill, we can make OSHA mean something again and can further the most important goal: to ensure a safe and healthy workplace for all workers.”
Noting that April 28 is Worker Memorial Day, Hare added, “...there is no more appropriate time to reintroduce this bill to strengthen OSHA and increase penalties for employers who refuse to play by the rules.”
The “Protecting America's Workers Act” amends the Occupational Safety and Health Act to cover more workers, increase penalties, strengthen protections, enhance public accountability and clarify an employer’s duty to provide safety equipment. Specifically, it:
The legislators convened a press conference following their hearings, surrounding themselves with workers injured on the job and the family members of workers who suffered fatal workplace accidents. They included Michele Lewis, whose step-father, Mike, lost his life in a trench collapse in Florida. The company was cited for failing to follow OSHA safety standards that allegedly would have saved his life. Emanuel Torres-Gomez lost his father, Eleazar, when he was killed at a laundry processing plant in Oklahoma.
“On behalf of my family, I am here to lend support to this legislation hoping it becomes law,” said Torres-Gomez. “It is my family’s hope that this law will make workplaces across America safer and prevent tragedies like my father’s death from happing to others. No one should have to endure what my family has over the past 7 weeks.”
On March 6, Torres-Gomez' father was killed when he was dragged into an industrial dryer at a Cintas Corp. facility in Tulsa, Okla. Torres-Gomez was trapped for 20 minutes in the dryer, which could reach temperatures as high as 300 degrees. In 2005, OSHA fined Cintas for not putting guards on a conveyor at a laundry in New York. The equipment that was unguarded in that case was similar to the equipment involved in Torres-Gomez' death.
Said Torres-Gomez: “If the company had added the guards, which it knew was required by OSHA, my father would be alive today. ... My family and I came to the United States in 1987 in hopes of finding a better life. Our story is one not unlike many people who come to the United States looking for a better life that includes better working conditions, better pay the American dream.
“That’s something my father didn’t get to fully enjoy due to an unsafe workplace,” Torres-Gomez said, adding, “My father’s death was preventable.”