Industrial and Construction Applications

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1. OSHA: Workers Are Not Being Protected From Chemical Hazards

Saying that the “most serious hazards are the silent killers, the ones we can’t see,” Dr. David Michaels…….

“Thousands of workers still are becoming ill and dying as a result of exposure to hazardous chemical,” said Michaels, adding that workers are being “exposed to levels of chemicals that are legal, but not safe.”

OSHA’s PELs, which are regulatory limits on the amount or concentration of a substance in the air, are intended to protect workers against the adverse health effects of exposure to hazardous substances. Ninety-five percent of OSHA’s current PELs, which cover fewer than 500 chemicals, have not been updated since their adoption in 1971.

Michaels pointed out that OSHA’s current PELs cover only a small fraction of the tens of thousands of chemicals used in American workplaces. “New chemicals are introduced into the workplace every year and we’re struggling to keep up,” he admitted.

Substantial resources – including expensive economic and technical feasibility studies that often take years to complete – are required to issue new exposure limits or update existing workplace exposure limits, as courts have required complex analyses for each proposed PEL.

As a result, “Many of our chemical exposure standards are dangerously out of date and do not adequately protect workers,” said Michaels, who noted that only 30 PELs out of the more than 500 that exist have been updated. “While we will continue to work on updating our workplace exposure limits, we are asking public health experts, chemical manufacturers, employers, unions and others committed to preventing workplace illnesses to help us identify new approaches to address chemical hazards.”……

In May 2012, the Federal Advisory Council on Occupational Safety and Health recommended that the Department of Labor consider asking the president to update OSHA’s PELs by executive order. In October 2013, OSHA created a toolkit to assist employers and workers in identifying and substituting safer chemicals to use in place of more hazardous ones, and developed an Annotated Occupational Exposure Limits table that provides accurate and up-to-date chemical information to employers who want to voluntarily adopt newer, more protective workplace exposure limits for those chemicals that are covered by outdated OSHA exposure standards.