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DESCRIPTION:Workers Health & Safety, OSHA, Workers Compensation & Our 
 Unions\nhttps://laborfest.net/2025/event/workers-health-safety-osha-and-workers-compensation/\nJuly 
 8 @ 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm PDT \n\nLabor Under Attack (Zoom event)\nThe 
 destruction of OSHA and CA OSHA means more workers will die, and the 
 retaliation of workers for being whistleblowers is escalating. Cal OSHA is 
 understaffed by 40% and is incapable of enforcing the health and safety 
 laws on the books. This is also the case nationally where there are less 
 than 2000 OSHA inspectors for 130 million workers.\nAt the same time, 
 millions of workers have been injured on the job and have suffered from a 
 corrupt Workers Compensation system that benefits the insurance companies 
 and bosses.\nThis panel will look at these attacks, how workers and unions 
 should do to defend their members.\nPanelists:\nAshley M. Gjøvik, Apple 
 Whistleblower\nBecky McClain, Pfizer molecular biologist & 
 whistleblower\nVina Colley, OCAW Atomic Workers National Nuclear Workers 
 for Justice/OSHA EPA, Pres P.R.E.S.S./EEOICP Claimant Worker-National 
 Advocate/Downwinder, President of Portsmouth/Piketon Residents 
 for\nEnvironmental Safety and Security (PRESS) Co-Founder of National 
 Nuclear Workers for Justice (NNWJ) OCAW member\nVincent Ward, ILWU Local 10 
 injured worker\nSponsored by WorkWeek\n\nCal/OSHA faces a perfect storm: 
 Inspector vacancies remain above 40% while Governor Newsom proposes a $21 
 million cut in Cal/OSHA enforcement, and employers get a 74% decrease in 
 assessments to fund Cal/OSHA\n \nThe latest available staffing information 
 documents that the vacancy rate for Cal/OSHA field inspectors is 42.5% with 
 eight enforcement offices with vacancy rates at or above 50%.  These 
 crippling vacancies mean the agency is unable to meet its mandate or 
 mission, with the cost paid in blood and tears by California workers and 
 their families.  \n \nAt the same time, in January 2025, Governor Newsom 
 proposed cutting Cal/OSHA’s enforcement budget by $21 million dollars 
 ($21,028,000) for the fiscal year starting on July 1, 2025.  Cal/OSHA is 
 not funded by the state’s General Fund but rather from an annual grant 
 from Fed OSHA, an assessment on employers’ workers compensation insurance 
 premiums for the Occupational Safety and Health (OSH) Fund, and a 
 fee-for-service for equipment inspections on elevators, amusement rides, 
 etc.  All these funds are independent of the state General Fund.  \n \nThe 
 Governor’s proposed $21 million cut to Cal/OSHA enforcement is not 
 prompted by any concerns about the state budget, but is a deliberate 
 decision to reduce worker protections in California that are fully funded 
 by an independent sources of revenue. \n \nAlso in January, the Cal/OSHA 
 Reporter trade journal reported that the Department of Industrial Relations 
 (DIR) sharply decreased the assessments employers paid to the Occupational 
 Safety and Health Fund by 74% in state fiscal year 2024-25 (COR, January 
 17, 2025).  The assessment paid by employers this year is 0.001885% of 
 their workers comp premiums. \n \nCal/OSHA faces a perfect storm of 
 years-long inspector vacancies now compounded by the Governor’s decision 
 to reduce worker protections and provide employers with refunds on their 
 assessments to the OSH Fund.  \n \nCal/OSHA had 114 vacancies in positions 
 for compliance safety and health officers (CSHO) in November 2024, for a 
 vacancy rate of 42.5%.  The data, released by the DIR in March 2025, is 
 from the October 31, 2024, “Organization Chart” for Cal/OSHA.  DIR 
 withholds release of staffing data for months after it has been 
 generated.\n \nFifteen enforcement District Offices have CSHO vacancy rates 
 at or above 40% -- with eight offices having vacancy rates of 50% or more.  
 These offices are: Santa Barbara (80%), Riverside (71%), PSM Refinery unit 
 (70%), San Francisco (67%), Bakersfield (62%), Fremont (60%), San 
 Bernardino (57%), Oakland (50%), PSM/Non-Refinery (47%), American Canyon 
 (45%), Santa Ana (45%), Van Nuys (45%), Fresno (45%), Monrovia (40%), and 
 Long Beach (40%).  \n \nThere were six District Offices without a District 
 Manager in Los Angeles, Long Beach, Modesto, Santa Barbara, Van Nuys, and 
 the San Bernardino Mining & Tunneling office in November 2024.  In 
 theseDistrict Offices, a CSHO must serve as Acting District Manager, so 
 those offices effectively have one additional CSHO vacancy as the ADMs do 
 not conduct field inspections.  \n \nFour District Offices had zero 
 clerical staff – Fresno High Hazard Unit, Riverside, Santa Ana, and Santa 
 Barbara – which means CSHOs must spend time doing administrative work. \n 
 \nThe California Employment Development Department (EDD) reported the 
 California civilian labor force in November 2024 as 19,396,500 workers. The 
 161.5 FTE CSHO positions represents an inspector to worker ratio of 1 
 inspector to 120,102 workers. Cal/OSHA’s inspector to worker ratio of 1 
 inspector to 120,000workers is much less health protective than Washington 
 State’s ratio of 1 to 26,000, and Oregon’s ratio of 1 to 24,000.\n 
 \nThe new Agricultural Safety unit had zero CSHOs in November 2024, and 
 only five designated position for the four slated enforcement offices 
 (Bakersfield, El Centro, Lodi, and Salinas), plus about 10 satellite 
 offices throughout the state. \n \nThe  Cal/OSHA Org Chart indicates that 
 10 field CSHOs are “bilingual.”  Region II (Northern California and 
 Central Valley) and Region VIII (Central Valley and Central Coast) – 
 regions with numerous farmworkers – both have one bilingual CSHOs in the 
 field.  It is estimated that 5 million of the state’s 19 million worker 
 labor force speak languages other than English, with many monolingual in 
 their native tongue.\n \n\nInformation compiled by Garrett Brown on March 
 11, 2025.  \n\n\n\nWorker safety agency NIOSH lays off most remaining staff 
   healthwatch 
 \nhttps://www.cbsnews.com/news/worker-safety-agency-niosh-lays-off-most-remaining-staff/?linkId=810633593\n\nBy 
  Alexander Tin Edited By  Faris Tanyos \n\nUpdated on: May 3, 2025 / 12:27 
 PM EDT / CBS News \n\nNearly all of the remaining staff at the National 
 Institute of Occupational Safety and Health were laid off Friday, multiple 
 officials and laid-off employees told CBS News, gutting programs ranging 
 from approvals of new safety equipment to firefighter health.\n\nMuch of 
 the work at NIOSH, an arm of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and 
 Prevention, had already stalled after an initial round of layoffs on April 
 1 at the agency ordered by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. 
 Kennedy Jr. \n\nNew requests for investigations of firefighter injuries and 
 workplace health hazards had already stopped being accepted. A CDC plan to 
 help Texas schools curb the spread of measles infections was also scrapped 
 due to the layoffs. \n\nNIOSH was started in 1970 as part of the same law 
 that created another federal agency called the Occupational Safety and 
 Health Administration, or OSHA. In addition to its own voluntary 
 recommendations for employers, NIOSH produces research to inform OSHA's 
 regulations and enforcement.\n\nNIOSH employees receiving layoff notices 
 late Friday included some workers for the World Trade Center Health 
 Program, miner safety, and firefighter health programs. Some workers for 
 those programs had been asked to temporarily return to work for another 
 month or two, after pleas from members of Congress.\n\n\nAmong the layoffs 
 to NIOSH's World Trade Center Health Program were nurses and scientists, 
 two CDC officials said. Staff dealing with enrollment, member services and 
 other administrative duties were also cut.\n\nAn organizational chart 
 annotated by a group of NIOSH staff showing the divisions that were 
 eliminated by the layoffs. \n\nLayoff notices received by workers Friday 
 were almost identical to those received in the initial round of Kennedy's 
 cuts, which said that their duties "have been identified as either 
 unnecessary or virtually identical to duties being performed elsewhere in 
 the agency." \n\nThe main difference with Friday's layoff notices was the 
 date they take effect: workers are being put on leave until an official 
 separation from service on July 2, instead of in June.\n\nThe layoffs also 
 stopped work at the agency's National Personal Protective Technology 
 Laboratory. This NIOSH division had been the government body tasked with 
 vetting safety equipment like N95 masks and breathing devices used by 
 emergency workers.\n\n\nThe laboratory's respirator approval program had 
 been in the middle of processing around 100 applications for personal 
 protective equipment, one laid-off official said.\n\nStalled work includes 
 changes needed to meet new standards issued by the National Fire Protection 
 Association for this year. No equipment is currently certified to meet 
 those standards, nor has the agency been able to issue refunds to 
 application fees paid for by manufacturers.\n\nEfforts to spot and warn of 
 counterfeit personal protective equipment was also halted due to the 
 layoffs, officials said.\n\n"Millions of workers across various sectors - 
 including healthcare, construction, and emergency services - depend on 
 NIOSH-approved respirators. Without these approvals, their safety is 
 compromised, leading to potential illness, injury, or even death," laid-off 
 employees wrote in a letter shared with CBS News.\n\nHHS responds to NIOSH 
 layoffs\n\nHHS did not immediately respond to a request for comment on 
 Friday, asking what would happen to the agency's work now that most of its 
 teams had been eliminated. The department had previously said that NIOSH 
 would be absorbed into a new agency called the Administration for a Healthy 
 America.\n\nIn a post Saturday on X, the department said that firefighter 
 programs were still a top priority and that as "the agency continues to 
 streamline operations, the essential services provided by NIOSH will remain 
 fully intact and uninterrupted."\n\nThe department also claimed no CDC 
 employees had been terminated on Friday and only a "required notice was 
 sent to NIOSH employees, following the agreed-upon standard process with 
 the union."\n\n\nLaid-off NIOSH workers told CBS News that the department's 
 post was misleading, since workers represented by unions were still on the 
 job until Friday, when they received letters from HHS informing them of the 
 layoffs and that they would be locked out of the agency's 
 buildings.\n\nThat capped a process which started in late March, after 
 unions received a notice saying that most NIOSH employees could be cut by 
 the end of June. In the past, unions could use that time to negotiate with 
 the department, allowing employees to continue to work during talks that 
 might mitigate or avoid a "reduction in force" of their 
 members.\n\nHowever, unions were unable to initiate negotiations with 
 Kennedy's department to head off the layoff notices Friday.  An executive 
 order issued by President Trump ended collective bargaining with unions 
 representing the CDC and some other agencies, which is now being challenged 
 in court.\n https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/07/02/18877750.php
SUMMARY:Workers Health & Safety, OSHA and Workers Compensation & Our Unions
LOCATION:Zoom Event Go To LaborFest To Get 
 Link\nhttps://laborfest.net/2025/event/workers-health-safety-osha-and-workers-compensation/
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/07/02/18877750.php
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