U.S. Workplace Safety Agencies Need Budget Increases to Protect Workers

30 Jun 2022

Thursday, June 30, 2022
Press Contacts: 
Melissa Moriarty melissa@nationalcosh.org, 603.505.7135

Advocates tell House Appropriations:

U.S. Workplace Safety Agencies Need Budget

Increases to Protect Workers

LOS ANGELES and NEWINGTON, CT:  Federal agencies responsible for workplace safety need substantial budget increases, said safety advocates and experts today in a letter to Rep. Rosa L. DeLauro (D-CT), chair of the U.S. House Appropriations Committee.

“We simply cannot afford to cut corners on enforcement, outreach and education programs, in addition to other measures that keep workers safe – especially not when workers are facing even greater threats to our health and well-being,” said Mike Fitts, executive director of the Connecticut Council on Occupational Safety and and Health (ConnectiCOSH) and Jessica E. Martinez and Marcy Goldstein-Gelb, co-executive directors of the National Council for Occupational Safety and Health.

The U.S. House Appropriations Committee is meeting today in a mark-up session to review FY 2023 budget recommendations from subcommittees with authority over the U.S. Department of Labor and related agencies. The Subcommittee on Labor, Health and Human Services, Education, and Related Agencies, also chaired by Rep. DeLauro, has recommended a significant $100 million increase in funding for the U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Agency (OSHA), as well as increases for the Mine Safety and Health Agency (MSHA) and the National Institutes for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH). In addition, the Subcommittee on Interior, Environment and Related Agencies has recommended a funding increase for the U.S. Chemical Safety Board.

“When COVID-19 tore through our workplaces in 2020, OSHA’s response was totally inadequate,” said Martinez. “Weak guidance, not enough inspections, no answers to repeated complaints from workers. We can’t let that happen again.” The COVID-19 pandemic has caused the largest workplace death toll of any single disease or event in U.S. history.

At the end of 2021, Martinez noted, U.S. OSHA had just 750 safety inspectors, the lowest number in the agency's 51-year history. “It makes no sense to disarm the agency charged with protecting workers at a time when there are growing threats to our safety and health,” said Martinez. “The COVID pandemic is far from over. Heat exposure will become more dangerous in years to come, as climate change leads to more severe weather events. And workers are still dying every year from hazards we know how to prevent, like trench collapses and falls from a height.”

Each year, some 5,000 U.S. workers die from preventable sudden workplace trauma, while an estimated 120,000 lives are claimed due to long-term occupational diseases and more than three million workers suffer preventable workplace injuries and illnesses.

“ConnectiCOSH has worked closely with Rep. DeLauro for many years, and she has a long track record of standing up for working people,” said Mike Fitts of ConnectiCOSH. “It’s good to see long-overdue budget increases for workplace safety come out of the right subcommittees, but this budget has a long way to go to get through the House and Senate. Workers and families are going to stay involved, and raise our voices to get the protections we need and deserve.”

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ConnectiCOSH is a non-profit organization that works to educate, support and train workers about how to stay healthy and safe in their workplace.

National COSH links the efforts of local worker health and safety coalitions in communities across the United States, advocating for elimination of preventable hazards in the workplace. For more information, please visit NationalCOSH.org. Follow us at @NationalCOSH on Facebook, @NationalCOSH on Twitter and @NationalCOSH on Instagram.