Washington House Democrats are again pushing to pass the Protecting America’s Workers Act legislation that has been introduced several times without being passed.
Democratic lawmakers in Washington are once again making a push to pass the Protecting America’s Workers Act – legislation that has been introduced to Congress several times without being passed.
Among other things, the Act gives OSHA tools to ensure that employers promptly correct hazardous working conditions, protect workers from retaliation when they blow the whistle on unsafe working conditions, and hold employers accountable for violations that cause illness, death or serious injury to workers.
Having being first introduced in 2004, the bill has since been defeated 16 times.
The latest version was introduced on the ninth anniversary of the Kleen Energy power plant explosion that killed six workers in Middletown, Connecticut. It is sponsored by Rep. Joe Courtney (D-CT), whose friend, Ronald Crabb, was among those killed in the explosion. Courtney said the OSHAct had not been meaningfully updated since it was passed in 1970.
“Every day, 14 employees go to work and never come home to their families due to fatal on-the-job injuries. The OSHAct made great strides in protecting American workers, but since it was enacted the American workplace has modernized and diversified.”
“The law should keep up with the realities that workers face on the job today. Our bill is focused on updates and compliance, not on petty, punitive measures against employers, and will ensure that today’s workforce is empowered and protected by our nation’s chief worker safety law.”
Congresswoman Alma Adams, who is one of 28 democrats supporting the bill, said it was time the OSHAct be modernized.
“For too long, employers in some of our most dangerous occupations have been able to cut corners and not face true accountability for keeping safe and healthy workspaces. The Protecting America’s Workers Act would change this dynamic, improving crucial recordkeeping, increasing monetary penalties for unscrupulous employers, and putting American workers first.”
The Protecting America’s Workers Act would: