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After years of hard fighting,
the labor movement has achieved certain basic legal and contractual
health and safety rights for workers. These rights apply to all
workers in the U.S. whether or not they are United States citizens.
You should note that, even though you have these legal rights,
they are not easy to enforce. Your employer may respond harshly
if you exercise them. Even though the law is on your side, it
could take years for government officials and the courts to undo
an employer's illegal punishment of a worker who exercises a
safety and health right. If you plan to exercise a safety and
health right in a hostile employment environment, it is a good
idea to be prepared for a harsh response and a long wait to obtain
justice.
Each brief description below
is linked to a fuller explanation of the law and how to use it.
Under the federal Occupational
Safety and Health Act, you have a
legal right to a workplace free of recognized health and safety
hazards.
Under regulations of the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, you have a
legal right to any information that your employer has about any
exposure you may have had to hazards such as toxic chemicals
or noise. You also have a right to any medical records your employer
has concerning you.
Under Occupational Safety and
Health Administration regulations, you have a
legal right to complain to your employer about dangerous conditions
Under the Occupational Safety
and Health Act, you have a
legal right to file complaints with the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration (OSHA) and request OSHA inspections.
This right also applies to safety complaints to other government
agencies, such as a Fire Department.
Under Occupational Safety and
Health Administration regulations, you have the
legal right to respond to questions from an OSHA inspector and
point out hazards to the inspector, including telling the
inspector about past accidents or illnesses and informing the
inspector if your employer has temporarily eliminated hazards
during the inspection.
Under the Occupational Safety
and Health Act you have a
legal right not to be discriminated against for exercising your
health and safety rights. "Discrimination" includes
any adverse action by an employer-- anything from being harassed
to being fired.
How to Protect Yourself from Retaliation If You Need to
Complain About a Dangerous Job Factsheet -- prepared by
the National COSH Network's "Protecting Workers Who Exercise
Rights" (PWWER) project -- is available in exchange for
a self-addressed stamped envelope, sent to NYCOSH, 116 John
Street., New York, NY 10038. (Please include a note requesting
the anti-retaliation factsheet.)
Under the National Labor Relations
Act you have a legal
right to refuse to work or to walk off the job because of workplace
hazards. This right only applies to "concerted activities,"
which are actions by two or more workers or by one worker whose
action is endorsed by other workers. Such a refusal to work because
of workplace hazards must be based on a good faith belief that
the condition is hazardous. Even if you are wrong about the danger
(say, if you refuse to work because you smell what you believe
is a toxic vapor, but it turns out to be a non-toxic vapor),
your actions are protected.
Under Occupational Safety and
Health Administration regulations, you have a
legal right to refuse work that places you in imminent danger
of death or serious physical harm and there is not time to
contact OSHA. Before you refuse unsafe work, you should request
that your employer eliminate the hazard and you should make it
clear that you will accept an alternate assignment. Unlike the
National Labor Relations Act, the OSHA rule protects actions
by a single worker as well as "concerted activities."
The OSHA regulation only protects you if the danger can be proven
to exist; if you refuse to work because you believe a condition
is hazardous, but are proved wrong, OSHA does not protect you.
Under regulations of the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, you have a
legal right to information and training about hazardous materials
you work with, including Material Safety Data Sheets.
Under regulations of the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, you have a
legal right to information about injuries and illnesses experienced
by you and your co-workers.
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