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Last updated on
08/28/2008
Safety
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Thousands of workers die or are
injured because of on-the-job accidents each year. Many
more are exposed to conditions that cause serious
illnesses years later.
When does a worker have the
right to refuse dangerous work?
On February 26, 1980, the United
States Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling which more
clearly defined a worker's right to refuse work where an
employee(s) has (have) reasonable apprehension that
death or serious injury or illness might occur as a
result of performing the work.
The Court, in its decision,
emphasized that the OSHA Act provides a worker with the
right to choose not to perform an assigned task due to
reasonable apprehension of death or serious injury
coupled with a reasonable belief that no less drastic
alternative is available.
Further, the Court held that a worker
who utilizes this OSHA protection may not be
discriminated against for such action.
However, the Court also indicated
that an employee who refused work based on the
regulation runs the risk of discharge or reprimand in
the event a court subsequently finds that he/she acted
unreasonably or in bad faith.
In light of the Supreme
Court's decision, what should CWA members who are faced
with an imminent danger situation do?
The Supreme Court has said that a
worker may refuse unsafe work where he/she has refused
the job in good faith. Good faith may be interpreted as
an honest belief that the job was unsafe and where the
job was unusually and objectively dangerous.
Good faith can be demonstrated by
the manner by which you refuse unsafe work:
- Explain the hazard to the supervisor and your
steward;
- Offer to do other, safe work until the hazard is
corrected;
- Give management a chance to respond before doing
anything else;
- If the condition isn't corrected, call OSHA and
request an "imminent danger" inspection;
- Do not walk off the job. If management won't fix
the hazard, force them to take the next step. Make
sure you have expressed your reasons for refusing
the job and your willingness to do other work,
clearly and in the presence of your steward or other
workers.
If you're fired or
disciplined:
- file a grievance immediately;
- file an unfair labor practice charge with the
NLRB immediately but within 180 days;
- file a section 11(c) discrimination complaint
with OSHA immediately but within 30 days.
The bottom line is to stay cool. Don't let
management provoke you into rash actions which could
hurt your case later.
Proving that your job was
"abnormally and objectively dangerous" is a matter of
documentation:
- Was the job one you'd never done before? Or, had
the conditions of the job changed recently?
- Did you protest the job before?
- Did other workers protest the job before?
- Did others refuse to do the job?
- Was the company in violation of OSHA, state or
local health and safety regulations?
Many chemicals and conditions are clearly dangerous
but aren't covered by any standards. Have workers
been injured or made sick doing your job? Just what
chemicals were you working with?
If any CWA member refuses unsafe
work, he/she should notify the Local Union President. In
turn, this information should be made available to the
CWA Representative, and the CWA Occupational Safety and
Health Department.
What Can You Do?
All CWA members should make sure that
their employer is maintaining a safe and healthful
workplace. The key to making the workplace safe for all
CWA members is strong, active Local safety and health
committees. The committee can identify dangerous
conditions at the workplace and discuss them with
management. If the company refuses to cooperate, the
committee can request an OSHA inspection. The committee
should always coordinate its activities through the
Local officers, the CWA Representative and negotiated
safety and health committees.
In addition, CWA members
may obtain information and assistance by contacting:
CWA Occupational Safety
and Health Department
501 Third Street, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20001-2797
Phone: (202) 434-1160
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"No job is too important that we cannot take
the time to perform our work safely."
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Ladder inspections
The Safety meeting on 4/19/06 brought to light a few issues. First , the
company has decided to stop the practice of having a contractor come in on a
yearly basis, and inspecting the Ladders. Their position is that it is the
Tech's job to inspect their ladders EVERYDAY. We are urging
EVERYONE to follow this practice. If there is a question on
exactly how to inspect your ladder , you should ask your manager to give you the
BSP on how to accomplish this. We are asking the company to go over the
practices on ladder inspection in every work group. If they are not , please
contact the union hall and let us know.
Tier 3 meetings should be held monthly , and minutes should be taken . The
minutes should be sent to the AVP , and will be passed on to the Tier 2 meeting.
Refusing unsafe work
Urgent Safety Flash
Fatality in N.E.again
Fatality in
N.E for Time Warner
Verizon Fatality
Safety Flash November 2007
I Chose to Look The Other
Way
I could have saved a life that day,
But I chose to look the
other way.
It wasn't that I didn't
care,
I had the time, and I was
there.
But I didn't want to seem a
fool,
Or argue over a safety
rule.
I knew he'd done the
job before,
If I called wrong, he might
get sore.
The chances didn't seem that bad,
I've done the same,
He knew I had.
So I shook my head and
walked on by,
He knew the risks as well
as I.
He took the chance, I closed an eye,
And with that ace, I let
him die.
I could have saved a life
that day,
But I chose to look the
other way.
Now every time I see his
wife,
I'll know, I should
have saved his life.
That guilt is something I
must bear,
But it isn't
something you need to share.
If you see a risk that others take,
That puts their health or
life at sake.
The question asked, or
thing you say,
Could help them live
another day.
If you see a risk and walk away,
Then hope you never have to
say.
I could have saved a life
that day,
But I chose, to look the
other way.
Don Merrell
J.R. Simplot Company
Don Plant Traning Center
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