By Stephen
A. Borg
As
we have covered previously in this column, one of the biggest issues facing the
masonry industry – and the construction industry as a whole – is the proposed
new rule being pursued by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
to further reduce the permissible amount of workers’ exposure to crystalline
silica.
As
a part of MCAA’s game plan to combat this misguided and infeasible rule, the
association joined with 25 other associations who represent almost every facet
of the construction industry to create the Construction Industry Safety
Coalition (CISC). Over many months, numerous briefings, weekly conference
calls, and massive efforts by MCAA and our Coalition partners, we finalized our
Coalition comments and officially submitted them to the OSHA on Feb. 11.
While
our comments were detailed and extensive, the overarching theme and summary of
our comments is as follows:
“Given the lack of scientific explanation
justifying the new exposure limits, the many contradictions between the rule
and the realities faced in the construction industry, and the fact that agency
officials made significant errors in the basic data the rule is based on, we
are urging the administration to withdraw this proposed rule. We strongly urge
agency officials to work with us and employee groups to craft a silica measure
that will build upon the work all of us have done to reduce silica-related
deaths by 93 percent during the past three decades.”
On
top of these efforts, MCAA and all of our coalition partners also individually
submitted our own individual comments to OSHA, and MCAA has requested a time
block to testify at the public hearings scheduled to be held in Washington, D.C.,
beginning March 18, 2014. We truly appreciate all of the MCAA members
throughout the country who took the time to become educated on this drastic
proposed rule and submitted comments of their own to OSHA.
While
the comment period to submit comments to OSHA has officially closed, it is
imperative that each of you continues to educate yourselves on this rule,
participates in combating the rule at every opportunity, and voices your
concerns to your Members of Congress in both the House of Representatives and Senate.
The more we can raise our unified voices and show how impactful this rule would
be to our businesses, our industry, and our economy, the more we can have an
impact on the final rule or the hopeful withdraw of the rule all together.
MCAA
will continue this fight by participating in the public hearings in Washington,
D.C., and voicing our concerns with the overall rule. The more information we
can have on the overall impact of this rule on your businesses and real world
examples, the better we will be able to tell our story to back up our overall
opinions of the infeasibility of this rule.
Please
take the time to visit the docket for the rule at www.regulations.gov/#!docketDetail;D=OSHA-2010-0034.
Read the proposed rule and official comments that have been submitted, become educated,
and make your voice heard. Our comments and public testimony will hopefully
have a great impact on this rule, but our fight is only just beginning. We are
only as strong as the involvement from you, our members.
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