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- <text id=91TT2033>
- <title>
- Sep. 16, 1991: Accidents:Death on the Shop Floor
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Sep. 16, 1991 Can This Man Save Our Schools?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 28
- ACCIDENTS
- Death on The Shop Floor
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A murderous fire in a North Carolina poultry plant underscores
- the dangers of America's workplaces
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--With reporting by Joe Kane/Atlanta and Elaine
- Shannon/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Nobody who worked at the Imperial Food Products plant in
- Hamlet, N.C., had much love for the place. The job--cooking,
- weighing and packing fried chicken parts for fast-food
- restaurants--was hot, greasy and poorly paid. The conveyor
- belts moved briskly, and the few rest breaks were so strictly
- timed that going to the bathroom at the wrong moment could lead
- to dismissal. But in the sleepy town of 6,200 there was not much
- else in the way of work. So most of the plant's 200 employees,
- predominantly black and female, were thankful just to have the
- minimum-wage job. Until last week, that is.
- </p>
- <p> The morning shift had just started when an overhead
- hydraulic line ruptured, spilling its volatile fluid onto the
- floor. Gas burners under the frying vats ignited the vapors and
- turned the 30,000-sq.-ft. plant into an inferno of flame and
- thick, yellow smoke. Panicked employees rushed for emergency
- exits only to find several of them locked. "I thought I was
- gone, until a man broke the lock off," says Letha Terry, one of
- the survivors. Twenty-five of Terry's fellow employees were not
- so lucky. Their bodies were found clustered around the blocked
- doorways or trapped in the freezer, where the workers had fled
- in vain from the fire's heat and smoke.
- </p>
- <p> The disaster brought to light the mostly invisible body
- count of the American workplace. By some estimates, more than
- 10,000 workers die each year from on-the-job injuries--about
- 30 every day. Perhaps 70,000 more are permanently disabled. The
- fire also exposed the weakness of measures for ensuring job
- safety. The 11-year-old Imperial Food Products plant had never
- been inspected. Like a lot of American workplaces, it fell
- through the gaping cracks of a system in which there are too few
- inspectors, penalties are mostly trifling, and the procedures
- for reporting dangerous conditions can leave workers to choose
- between risking their jobs and risking their lives.
- </p>
- <p> "The tragedy that occurred in Hamlet is a direct result of
- 10 years of the Reagan-Bush philosophy of letting industry
- police itself," says Deborah E. Berkowitz, top safety expert for
- the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union.
- "There's a USDA inspector in every poultry plant to protect
- consumers from getting a stomachache, but there's nobody
- protecting people from getting killed."
- </p>
- <p> By almost every measure, America's regulatory safeguards
- have grown threadbare. At the top of the frayed system is the
- 21-year-old Occupational Safety and Health Administration, the
- federal body that attempts to oversee the nation's 6 million
- workplaces with just 1,200 inspectors--down from a high of
- 1,388 in 1980. A strained operation at best, OSHA was stretched
- to the breaking point by Ronald Reagan, who came to office
- persuaded that businesses should police themselves. Under him,
- OSHA's budget fell one-fourth.
- </p>
- <p> OSHA has begun a turnaround under Gerard G. Scannell, a
- former safety chief at Johnson & Johnson who was chosen to head
- the agency in 1989. After years in which it rarely issued
- safety guidelines, OSHA has begun adopting them wholesale--though critics complain it too often approves rules drawn up by
- the industries it is supposed to supervise. Scannell has also
- brought eye-catching fines against offenders, including $3.5
- million against Arco Chemical and a record $4 million against
- Phillips Petroleum, after giant explosions at their plants left
- 40 dead. The agency "is more effective today than it has been
- in any time in its history," insists Alan McMillan, Deputy
- Assistant Secretary of Labor for occupational safety and health.
- </p>
- <p> But OSHA still lacks the clout to protect most American
- workers. By one important measure, the jobsite is safer:
- work-related fatalities have dropped from 12,500 ten years ago
- to 10,500 last year. But that is partly because there are fewer
- jobs these days in some of the most lethal industries, including
- steel, shipbuilding and logging. Meanwhile, job-related
- illnesses and crippling injuries are on the increase. "The
- walking wounded are a part of the cost of doing business," says
- Bruce Raynor of the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers
- Union.
- </p>
- <p> Twenty-three states have devised their own regulatory
- schemes, which exempt them from federal scrutiny, but the
- results have been mixed. North Carolina, where the Hamlet fire
- took place, has one of the worst systems. Under federal
- guidelines, the state should have 116 inspectors. Instead it has
- just 27 to oversee 163,053 employers. Last week the Charlotte
- Observer reported that in 1990 inspections declined 35% from the
- previous year and the state returned $453,000 in unspent federal
- money that could have been used to perform more inspections.
- </p>
- <p> Changes in the American economy have left employees more
- vulnerable, especially the ones in unskilled blue-collar jobs.
- Labor unions, which can step in to remedy unsafe conditions, now
- represent just 18% of the work force. Some of the most
- injury-prone industries, like food processing and textiles, have
- clustered in right-to-work states across the South, where labor
- organizers get the kind of welcome that used to greet Freedom
- Riders.
- </p>
- <p> The merger-and-acquisition craze of the past decade also
- led to imprudent cost cutting. The elimination of relief crews,
- forced overtime and deferred (meaning neglected) maintenance
- have resulted in tired workers and worn equipment--a deadly
- combination. There are further dangers in industries like oil
- and petrochemicals, where subcontracting has become a common
- money-saving move. Barely trained newcomers, many of them
- aliens with an imperfect grasp of English, are put at the
- controls of dangerous machinery, with predictable results. In
- Texas six major explosions at chemical plants and refineries
- have killed 47 workers in the past five years and injured 1,000
- more. Subcontract employees were believed to have been at fault
- in two, the blasts at Arco and Phillips.
- </p>
- <p> The hazards of poultry factories are typical of the
- conditions that workers face in many industries. With the demand
- for chicken rising as it gains on beef in the American diet, the
- assembly lines in poultry plants move twice as fast as they did
- a decade ago, often butchering employees as well as poultry.
- According to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and
- Health, 1 in 5 poultry workers has been seriously injured in the
- hands, wrists or shoulders.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to severe cuts, the most common problems are
- the chronic disabilities that go under the heading of
- repetitive-motion trauma. Line workers, who gut, clean and
- divide hundreds of birds each day, typically perform the same
- movement from 60 to 90 times a minute, thousands of times a day.
- When the human body is pressed to imitate the tireless actions
- of a machine, it revolts. The result is chronic tendinitis and
- carpal-tunnel syndrome, a painful condition of the wrists and
- forearms that can leave a worker virtually crippled even after
- corrective surgery.
- </p>
- <p> Like many dangerous industries, poultry processing has the
- advantage of a docile work force. Not only is the complaint proc
- ess an intimidating bureaucratic tangle, but the plant workers
- are often poorly paid and uneducated women. Anxious to keep
- their jobs--despite an average industry wage of just $5.50 an
- hour--they are unlikely to make waves. Many of the 25 who
- died in last week's fire were so poor that the Textile Workers
- Union sent dresses and men's suits to Hamlet for use as burial
- clothes.
- </p>
- <p> This fall Congress will hold hearings on a bill designed
- to toughen the regulatory system. Sponsored in the House by
- Michigan Democrat William Ford, the bill would require any
- company with more than 11 employees to set up a
- worker-management safety committee empowered to enforce jobsite
- safety rules. "Then there's no reason for an inspector to show
- up to unlock a door," says Franklin Mirer, safety director for
- the United Auto Workers. "The workers can do it."
- </p>
- <p> Labor organizers and workers' rights groups are calling
- for stronger measures. Some want an independent investigative
- body, like the National Transportation Safety Board, with the
- power to examine accident sites and set in motion industry-wide
- changes to save lives in the future. Another proposal in the
- Ford bill is more to their liking. It would make it easier for
- OSHA to bring criminal charges against individual employers who
- are repeat offenders. "Everyone knows that the subway worker
- who killed five people in New York was indicted for murder,"
- says Joseph A. Kinney, executive director of National Safe
- Workplace Institute in Chicago. "When are we going to be asking
- for indictments against the owners of Imperial Food?"
- </p>
- <p> And why not? When the recklessness of employers becomes
- lethal, perhaps it is time to call it a crime--and act
- accordingly.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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