Labor Secretary Speaks About Passage of House Bill

June 16, 2000
The House narrowly passed Wednesday the Labor, Health and Human\r\nServices, and Education Appropriations Bill, cutting more than $1.7 billion from the plan to keep Americans working and safe on the job.

The House narrowly passed Wednesday the Labor, Health and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Bill.

In response to the decision, Secretary of Labor Alexis M. Herman said the House has "reversed the course of our success by voting to cut more than $1.7 billion" from the plan to keep working Americans safe.

The full House voted 220 to 203 last week to accept a rider on the bill that would block OSHA from spending money to promulgate its ergonomics rule.

"The House said no to an ergonomics standard that would protect millions of workers from debilitating injuries," said Herman.

Herman also noted that the bill passed in its current form prevents nearly 650,000 workers who would get skills training the help they need to find a job and prevents nearly 3,100 veterans from getting employment assistance.

She said she was especially disappointed by the continuing assault on the health and safety of working Americans.

"We know that we can prevent 300,000 repetitive motion injuries each year by simply finishing our work on the proposed ergonomics standard," said Herman. "The action to stop our work on a sensible and economical standard is wrong."

President Clinton has threatened to veto the House bill, which would grant no spending increases to OSHA and is $44 million under the president''s budget request for the agency.

"A bill that fails to provide key resources for education, child care, worker training and other priorities is unacceptable," said President Clinton. "If it were presented to me in its current form, I would veto it."

"The funding levels for vital worker programs must be restored and the prohibitions against moving forward on OSHA''s ergonomics rule must be deleted in any final action on the Labor/HHS/Education appropriations bill," commented Herman.

by Virginia Sutcliffe

Sponsored Recommendations

ISO 45001: Occupational Health and Safety Management Systems (OHSMS)

March 28, 2024
ISO 45001 certification – reduce your organizational risk and promote occupational health and safety (OHS) by working with SGS to achieve certification or migrate to the new standard...

Want to Verify your GHG Emissions Inventory?

March 28, 2024
With the increased focus on climate change, measuring your organization’s carbon footprint is an important first action step. Our Green House Gas (GHG) verification services provide...

Download Free ESG White Paper

March 28, 2024
The Rise and Challenges of ESG – Your Journey to Enhanced Sustainability, Brand and Investor Potential

Free Webinar: Mining & ESG: The Sustainability Mandate

March 28, 2024
Participants in this webinar will understand the business drivers and challenges of ESG and sustainability performance, the 5 steps of the ESG and sustainability cycle, and prioritized...

Voice your opinion!

To join the conversation, and become an exclusive member of EHS Today, create an account today!