Former OSHA Chief at Senate Hearing Next Week

The Senate HELP Committee's Subcommittee on Employment and Workplace Safety announced that former OSHA Assistant Secretary, Mr. Gerard Scannell, will testify at next week's hearing on workplace safety.  He was the OSHA chief during the George H.W. Bush administration, and a long-time officer with the National Safety Council. 

The hearing (previous post here) about serious and repeat violators of worker safety protections will also feature testimony by Mr. Eric Frumin, Director of OHS for Unite!Here, who will likely discuss corporate bad actors, link Cintas (post here).   I'm so pleased to read that Senator Murray's staff invited Mr. Scannell to testify, and that he agreed to do so.   

During my formative years working at OSHA, Mr. Scannell was the head of the agency.  I was impressed with his genuine compassion for working people, and his sincere belief that employers had a duty---legal and moral---to ensure workplaces were safe.  He was a committed advocate for comprehensive management systems to control and eliminate hazards---like the process safety management standard---as well as a proponent of using the general duty clause for ergonomic hazards and instance-by-instance sanctions for recordkeeping and other violations.  As a GS-7 analyst, I observed how he tactfully manuevered OMB's and the White House's political views with his personal commitment to workers' rights.  He provides a great example of how significant improvements can be made using the OSH Act despite the challenging system and the politics.    

   

More like this

This was one of the first-class quotes from former OSHA Assistant Secretary Jerry Scannell (1989-1993) during today's hearing on workers' safety and health before the Senate HELP Subcommittee on Employment and Workplace Safety.  His comment came in response to discussions about OSHA's and the…
Two congressional committees, one in the House the other in the Senate will hold oversight hearings this week on OSHA.  The timing is quite fitting: Saturday, April 28 is Worker Memorial Day.  On Tuesday, April 24, the Subcommittee on Workforce Protections of the House Education and Labor…
Mr. Eleazar Torres-Gomez, 46, was killed at an Oklahoma Cintas laundry plant on March 6, 2007, when he was dragged into an industrial dryer because of an unguarded conveyor.  Federal OSHA investigated the fatality and, this week, proposed a $2.78 million penalty for, among other things, 42…
A coal mine operator in Hazard, Kentucky received a $220,000 penalty from MSHA for flagrantly violating electrical lockout/tagout procedures (such as padlocking an on/off switch to ensure that a machine is not unexpectedly turned-on, plugged in or energized while it is being serviced.)  The…