• UFCW.org
  • Your Rights Under OSHA
  • Resources
  • Take Action
  • Home
  • Trainings
  • Safety Committee Guide
    • Bathroom Breaks
    • Biological Hazards
    • Chemicals
    • Cold
    • Hazards
    • Health Hazards
    • Heat
    • Identifying Hazards in the Workplace
    • Methods for Controlling Hazards
    • Methods for Guarding Machines
    • Noise
    • Reducing Risks
    • Sample Contract Language
    • Sample Inspection Checklist
    • Union Action
  • Retail Hazards
  • Resources
    • Documents
    • Filing a Complaint with OSHA
    • History of OSHA
    • How to Contact OSHA
    • Introduction to OSHA
    • OSHA 300 Logs
    • Stewards’ Role in Safety & Health
    • Preventing Heat Stress at Work
    • Updates
  • Home
  • Trainings
  • Safety Committee Guide
    • Bathroom Breaks
    • Biological Hazards
    • Chemicals
    • Cold
    • Hazards
    • Health Hazards
    • Heat
    • Identifying Hazards in the Workplace
    • Methods for Controlling Hazards
    • Methods for Guarding Machines
    • Noise
    • Reducing Risks
    • Sample Contract Language
    • Sample Inspection Checklist
    • Union Action
  • Retail Hazards
  • Resources
    • Documents
    • Filing a Complaint with OSHA
    • History of OSHA
    • How to Contact OSHA
    • Introduction to OSHA
    • OSHA 300 Logs
    • Stewards’ Role in Safety & Health
    • Preventing Heat Stress at Work
    • Updates
  • UFCW.org
  • Your Rights Under OSHA
  • Resources
  • Take Action

Posts Categorized: Press Releases

Displaying 4 of 44 Total Records

July 24, 2005

SAFETY SCAM THREATENS WORKERS’ LIVE

Bush administration, OSHA

Washington, D.C. — The segment of the American workforce most likely to suffer injury or death on the job was targeted in a scam operation by the federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agency. ICE officers masqueraded as safety instructors to round up documented and undocumented construction workers in North Carolina with a flier announcing a mandatory Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) meeting, earlier this month, then arrested 48 undocumented workers who attended the meeting.

“OSHA is responsible for worker safety and health,” said UFCW International President Joe Hansen.  “For ICE to stage a sham OSHA meeting in order to round up and arrest people undermines OSHA’s mission, and is a step backwards for state and federal efforts to reduce worker injuries and deaths. The word being brought back to worksites, after a scam like this, is that OSHA can’t be trusted. That kind of perception diminishes OSHA’s ability to do the critical work of protecting America’s labor force.”

There are more than 10 million foreign-born workers in the US, making up about 15% of the workforce. Immigrant workers have the highest rates of on-the-job injuries and fatalities.  Hispanic workers suffer 69% of all on-the-job injuries/deaths. In the meatpacking industry, more than half of the workers are foreign-born, and in some plants, up to 80% of the workers are immigrants.

“This unscrupulous action has shattered the trust between OSHA and the workers who depend on the agency the most,” said Hansen. “More and more often, it is immigrants who work in the most dangerous industries such as construction or meatpacking.  How can OSHA reach these at-risk workers with safety information now?  To these workers, OSHA no longer means safety, but betrayal. The Bush administration must denounce the kind of trickery that undermines safety.””

February 11, 2005

Reports Confirm Line Speed, Discrimination Put Meatpacking and Poultry Workers at Risk

Washington DC — The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW) urges immediate action to correct dangerous line speeds in meatpacking and poultry plants where injury rates are three times that of other manufacturing sectors.

A report by the Government Accounting Office (GAO), ordered by Senator Edward Kennedy, shows what workers in the industries have been subjected to for years:

  • Dangerous line speeds
  • An absence of injury and illness monitoring by OSHA
  • Intimidation that leads to under-reporting of injuries
  • Department of Agriculture inspectors without adequate training for recognizing hazardous conditions

“Blood, Sweat, and Fear,” a Human Rights Watch report, finds that the industries’ largely immigrant workforce “contend with conditions, vulnerabilities and abuses, which violate human rights,” including:

  • Life-ending injuries
  • Lack of compensation for injuries
  • Discrimination against immigrant workers
  • Illegal company actions to suppress workers’ rights to form unions

The reports call for immediate action by both employers and federal and state governments to rectify these conditions. “The GAO and Human Rights Watch reports have put the spotlight on these industries,” said UFCW International President Joe Hansen. “These findings underscore the need for immediate concrete action to correct these long-standing problems to ensure the safety of workers who put dinner on the table for American families.”

April 28, 2004

Safe Jobs are a Dying Breed Under Bush Administration

Bush administration, OSHA

Today, we mourn for workers who needlessly lost their lives on the job this year. We also mourn for the loss of workplace protections and safety regulations killed by the anti-worker Bush Administration.

This is an administration that goes out of its way to hurt workers. President Bush’s first major legislative action upon taking office was to sign legislation repealing OSHA’s ergonomics standard. This important worker safeguard, issued in November 2000, was ten years in the making and would have prevented hundreds of thousands of workplace injuries a year.

Today we also honor the workers who have been killed and injured on the job and their families. Last week, a UFCW member—a young worker from Guatemala—was killed working in a poultry plant. Thousands of workers, particularly immigrant workers, risk serious and sometimes fatal injury at work in workplaces such as poultry and meatpacking plants. No worker should be forced to risk their life to put food on the table for America’s families.

The UFCW is encouraged by actions such as those by Senator Edward Kennedy who is working to strengthen worker safety by introducing a bill this week that will expand protections for workers under the Occupational Safety and Health Act. Senator Kennedy’s bill includes a mandate that employers pay for safety gear they require workers to wear. The Bush Administration has so far refused to complete and issue this standard. It will also strengthen penalties against employers who kill or seriously injure workers by willfully violating OSHA standards.

The Bush Administration has joined with business supporters to roll back, block, or stall needed worker protections. This Worker’s Memorial Day, the UFCW reiterates its commitment to electing a President that will put worker need before corporate greed.

August 4, 2003

“”Next Action Undetermined””; Stalled OSHA Regulation Leaves Workers At Risk

OSHA

(Washington, DC)–America’s most dangerous industries will most likely stay that way if OSHA continues to stall. The low-wage, predominantly Hispanic immigrant, workforce in meatpacking and poultry plants suffer the highest injury rates in the nation. Forced by their employers to pay for their own safety gear, such as mesh gloves, boots and even ear plugs, workers end up wearing it beyond its useful life, putting them at risk for serious injury.

The labor movement, in conjunction with the Congressional Hispanic Caucus, is calling for the Secretary of Labor to act on the rule that mandates employer payment for personal protective equipment. The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union (UFCW)– joined by eight additional labor organizations–today, filed a petition with the Secretary of Labor to demand action within 60 days. This standard has been stalled at the agency for three years.

“”Many workers in these industries rely on personal protective equipment as virtually their only measure of protection. Workers should not be required to bear the cost of this basic protection.”” said Jackie Nowell, Director, Occupational Safety and Health Office, UFCW.

Nowell points out that workers in meat and poultry industries, for example, wear metal mesh gloves, which cost as much as $65, to prevent knife cuts and rubber boots to prevent falling on slippery floors.

In 1999, members of the UFCW and other unions offered real world testimony that without a requirement for employer payment, equipment was often improperly selected, poorly maintained and used beyond its useful life, putting workers at risk of injury.

“”Low-wage workers are most acutely in need of the protection offered by the rule. In the higher wage industries, most employers routinely supply all required safety gear free of charge.”” said Nowell.

Despite the clear demonstrated need and support for this requirement, the rule was not finalized and has lain dormant for three years. The rule has repeatedly slipped off OSHA’s Regulatory Agenda, and most recently was listed as a long-term action with the notation “”Next Action Undetermined.””

“”It is shocking and irresponsible that the Department can move so fast to cut overtime pay for workers through regulations, but won’t move a simple job safety regulation that has been waiting for years,”” said Patricia Scarcelli, International Vice President and Director of the Legislative and Political Affairs Department. “”This simple rule can help to improve the day-to-day lives of thousands of immigrant workers. And it is sitting there waiting for Secretary Chao to give the word.””

-30-

  • View the petition to Secretary of Labor Chao
  • View the Congressional Hispanic Caucus letter to Secretary of Labor Chao
  • Newer Entries »

Blog Posts by Category

  • Collective Bargaining
  • Constituency Groups
  • Corporate Responsibility
  • Health
    • Health Care
  • Legislation
  • Organizing
  • OSHA
  • Press Releases
  • Safety
    • Food Safety
  • UFCW Industries
    • Packing and Processing
    • Retail
    • Retail Food
  • UFCW Stewards
  • Updates

© 2025 UFCW Safety and Health Website.

All rights reserved.

About

This is the Safety and Health website of the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union. To reach the main website of the UFCW, go to www.ufcw.org.

Find us online

Back
to
top