Occupational Health News Roundup

Itâs been almost a decade since U.S. corporations, facing a consumer outcry over sweatshops, launched high-profile efforts to ensure that their products were manufactured under fair labor conditions. David Barboza of the New York Times reports that investigations by labor rights groups find dangerous and unfair working conditions persisting nonetheless:

The groups say some Chinese companies routinely shortchange their employees on wages, withhold health benefits and expose their workers to dangerous machinery and harmful chemicals, like lead, cadmium and mercury. â¦

And so while American and European consumers worry about exposing their children to Chinese-made toys coated in lead, Chinese workers, often as young as 16, face far more serious hazards. Here in the Pearl River Delta region near Hong Kong, for example, factory workers lose or break about 40,000 fingers on the job every year, according to a study published a few years ago by the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

In other news:

HealthDay News: A new study suggests that farm women who come into contact with some widely used pesticides may be at increased risk of developing allergic asthma.

Occupational Hazards: After 35 years, OSHA is proposing updates to its shipyard employment standard to reduce the hazards employees face. 

Bloomberg News: Workers at Smithfield Foodsâ Iowa plant have ratified a new contract that includes increases in wages and sick pay; UFCW Local 1142 President Warren Baker wonders why thereâs such a contrast between how the company deals with its Iowa workers vs. those in North Carolina.

Associated Press: The U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission cited MIT for two violations after an employee at its nuclear research reactor was exposed to a âsurprisingly high dose of radiation.â

Economist: In Japan, employees often work far more hours than theyâre paid for, and âdeath from overworkâ is all too common. A court case involving a quality-control manager who died at the age of 30, after collapsing at work at 4am, may pressure companies to treat âfree overtimeâ as paid work.

More like this

This week, the Salt Lake Tribune is running a must-read series of reports by Loretta Tofani about the human cost of the cheap goods we get from China. Tofani begins with the story of Wei Chaihua, a 44-year-old former farmer who sought factory work in order to give his children education and a…
Kristin Collins of The News & Observer (Raleigh, NC) reports that some produce growers in North Carolina aren no longer content with the Mexican farmworkers who come to the the U.S. on temporary visas. Some of these workers have unionized and begun demanding better wages and work schedules. So…
Chinese made toys, now under recall, contain a substance that metabolizes into gamma hydroxy butyrate, the "date rape" drug. There is apparently enough of the substance to actually drug kids who ingest the toys. A young boy in the U.S. state of Arkansas is believed to be the latest child to fall…
In the early 1990s, sports apparel giant Nike became the “poster child” for sweatshops in its global supply chain – child labor, forced labor (mandatory overtime), wage theft, confiscation of migrant workers’ passports, sexual harassment of women workers, and unsafe and unhealthy working conditions…