Economy
Related: About this forumForcing people to work in deadly heat is mostly legal in the U.S.
Forcing people to work in deadly heat is mostly legal in the U.S.
As the planet records some of its highest average temperatures, workers have barely any legal protections from extreme heat
By Jacob Bogage and Eli Tan
July 14, 2023 at 7:00 a.m. EDT
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Recent weeks have seen Earths highest average temperatures on record, according to climate studies, yet most U.S. workers have few legal protections related to extreme heat conditions. The federal government is in the midst of a years-long process to draft heat safety rules, and only six states have their own regulations that guarantee laborers access to water, rest and shade the three elements that medical professionals say can protect workers from heat illness.
The result, experts say, is that workers in a bevy of industries from farmworkers to roofers and delivery drivers to sanitation professionals are left to defend themselves under the scorching sun. ... The consequences can be deadly.
Between 2017 and 2022, the deaths of 121 workers on the job were officially attributed directly to heat, according to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which says that number is almost surely an undercount because heat-related deaths are often blamed on other workplace accidents or underlying health conditions. For example, an individual who mishandles dangerous machinery in heated conditions may have been severely dehydrated to the point of incapacitation, or a roofer who falls to their death may have lost consciousness due to heat.
Heat illness can lead workers to make unsafe decisions, said Elizabeth Strater, director of strategic campaigns for the United Farm Workers. ... You are already reacting more slowly, and you are making different choices than you would, she said. A lot of people become irritable at this point, theyre not going to be taking the advice of the people around them. Youre not recognizing these are [working] conditions that are unusual and dangerous.
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By Jacob Bogage
Jacob Bogage writes about business and technology for The Post, where he has worked since 2015. He previously covered the automotive and manufacturing industries and wrote for the Sports section. Twitter https://twitter.com/jacobbogage
By Eli Tan
Eli Tan is a business reporting intern at The Washington Post. Before The Post, he was a staff writer for CoinDesk, where he covered cryptocurrency and Web3. He lives in Washington, D.C. Twitter https://twitter.com/elitanjourno
Warpy
(113,130 posts)Plumbing work in my building started at 5 AM and was over at noon. If more needs to be done, I'll expect to have no water the same time tomorrow.
hedda_foil
(16,502 posts)moniss
(5,725 posts)I knew roofers years ago who would start at dawn and quit work by 1:00 p.m. and that was long before all of these recent major heatwaves. Road crews and driveway pavers pretty much keep at it though. Maybe they slow a little in mid-day now with the extra heat. You have to be very careful about driving above 30 mph or so in this heat because if you don't have good tires and have the proper pressure in them they can blow very easily. Despite the danger of theft it is a good idea to leave your car windows cracked open a couple of inches to let the heat escape when you park for long periods. Then when you first get to the car open all the windows right away and do not turn on your A/C for a couple of minutes. When you do turn it on just run it for a minute or so and shut it off for a couple of minutes and then let it run like normal. You need to cool that interior a little slower than normal so you don't risk cracking your windows. Here is a video from about 6 years ago and it's much worse now.