海角大神

As extreme heat rises, so do concerns for worker safety

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Loren Elliott/Reuters
Ernesto Hernandez carries a water cooler to set up a hydration station while enduring high temperatures near Winters, California, July 13, 2023.

Near the end of his first day working at the construction site, John Guerrero Jr. stopped sweating. He didn鈥檛 know the danger he was in.

It was late May, and temperatures had reached 96 degrees Fahrenheit as he helped to install interior walls, ceilings, and doors at the site in east Austin, according to a federal investigation. Drinking water and Gatorade during his three breaks wasn鈥檛 enough. By the end of the day, he died of heat stroke.

Mr. Guerrero was one of at least 279 people to die due to heat in Texas last year, according to The Texas Tribune. And at least 42 Texas workers died from heat-related illnesses on the job between 2011 and 2018, according to data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.听Given that there is to measure heat-related deaths, both figures are likely undercounts.

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Record-breaking heat this summer has raised risks for millions of American workers in hot conditions. This is helping to spur a rethink of how the country manages extreme heat and labor.

This statistical uncertainty 鈥 estimates of how many people die from heat each year in the United States range from 153 to over 10,000 鈥 is part of a broader lack of clarity, and perhaps evenconcern, across the country about the dangers posed by extreme heat. As summers have become hotter , one fact has become increasingly clear: The U.S. treats heat emergencies differently from other natural disasters.

Extreme heat is kind of weather disaster the U.S. faces, but unlike what happens amid most other extreme weather events, life has been expected to continue as normal during severe heat waves. While a hurricane might shut a city down, a bad heat wave often doesn鈥檛. Thanks to air conditioning, many Americans can avoid the worst dangers. But certain workers 鈥 like those in construction, transportation, and agriculture 鈥 can鈥檛.

Adrees Latif/Reuters
Workers mow the grass at an apartment complex during hot weather in Houston, July 17, 2023.

Workers have faced these dangers for years with few protections. Now, as millions of Americans have baked under record-breaking heat 鈥 nearly 40% of Americans faced heat advisories last week, according to the National Weather Service 鈥 the risks they face are helping spur a broader rethink of how the country manages extreme heat and labor.

鈥淲e haven鈥檛 really focused on extreme heat as a climate hazard,鈥 says Ladd Keith, an assistant professor at the University of Arizona who researches heat policy in urban areas.

鈥淲e鈥檝e seen a huge change in that in the last couple of years, and that is in part due to an increasing awareness,鈥 he adds. Heat 鈥渋s breaking records and impacting people鈥檚 lives.鈥

Efforts to keep workers safe

When it comes to heat safety, Austin, Texas, has been ahead of the curve.

In 2010, as policy director of the Workers Defense Project, an advocacy group for low-wage, immigrant workers in Texas, Greg Casar led the effort to establish a city ordinance requiring employers to give construction workers a 10-minute rest break every four hours 鈥撎 the bare minimum of protections, according to experts.听Now, as a U.S. congressman representing the city, he鈥檚 helping lead efforts to create federal standards to keep workers safe in extreme heat.

鈥淭his is a basic human decency issue,鈥 says Representative Casar, a Democrat and former Austin city councilor.

鈥淪ome important preliminary actions [are happening], but they need to be followed up with much stronger actions,鈥 he adds.

Only five states have heat safety standards. Every other state is subject to federal workplace safety rules set by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), but the only regulatory tool the agency has for extreme heat is the catchall general duty clause of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970.

SOURCE:

Natural Resources Defense Council

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

The clause requires employers to shield workers from hazards causing or likely to cause 鈥渄eath or serious physical harm.鈥 And when it comes to heat-related workplace injuries and deaths, it鈥檚 been difficult to enforce, experts say.

鈥淭he burden of proof for showing a violation of that clause [is] extremely high,鈥 says Juanita Constible, a senior climate and health advocate at the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York.

鈥淎nd fines are often too low to dissuade that behavior, especially when employers can negotiate down,鈥 she adds.

After Mr. Guerrero died, for example, OSHA issued his employer a $4,351 fine, according to public records. Another employer argued a $7,250 fine down to $2,175, according to public records, after an employee died of heat stroke while digging irrigation trenches. The mother of a San Antonio man who died last summer laying fiber-optic cables on a 101-degree day is suing his employer.

What limited rules exist in Texas may soon disappear as well.听There are no statewide heat safety rules in Texas, and听in September a new state听听aimed at creating a uniform regulatory code across the state would effectively nullify local rest break ordinances for construction workers in Austin and Dallas.

Carlos Barria/Reuters
A construction worker drinks a cold beverage during a heat wave in Scottsdale, Arizona, July 28, 2023.

Supporters of that law say the varying city ordinances create a patchwork of regulations that hurt businesses in the state, and members of the Texas construction industry say most employers are already doing their best to keep workers safe.

鈥淭he challenge you will always have with this particular issue is every single job site is different, and every single task on a job site is different, so it鈥檚 hard to write a one-size-fits-all rule,鈥 says Geoffrey Tahuahua, president of the Associated Builders and Contractors of Texas.

鈥淚鈥檇 more so look at what is the behavior we want to encourage, and make sure we鈥檙e encouraging that as much as possible,鈥 he adds. 鈥淎s OSHA inspectors make their way [around] Texas, I think they鈥檒l find there鈥檚 a lot of people doing the right thing.鈥

Last month, Democrats filed a in the Texas Legislature that would create heat illness prevention standards to protect workers in indoor and outdoor workplaces. That legislation is unlikely to be looked at until 2025, however, when the Legislature next reconvenes.

鈥淓arly days of heat governance鈥

In the Southwest, scalding summer temperatures have been paired with rapid growth. Austin is a prime example.

Not only has the Austin metro region been experiencing extremely hot summers 鈥 last summer was the on record, and last month was the听 on record 鈥 but its population almost doubled as well between 2000 and 2020.

For Eva Marroquin, who鈥檚 been working construction in Austin since 2005, working in the summer is like stepping into an oven. You start baking from your helmet to your boots, sunlight searing against your reflective vest, she says through a translator.

鈥淵our heart starts beating really, really fast. You feel like you have a fever, but it鈥檚 not a fever; it鈥檚 heat stroke,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have felt it countless times.鈥

Henry Gass/海角大神
Eva Marroquin stands outside the Workers Defense Project office in Austin, Texas. A construction worker since 2005, she says workers need to be better protected from extreme heat.

She鈥檚 speaking in the Workers Defense Project office, where she鈥檚 been a member since 2011. A single mother of five, she stretches her calloused hands across the table, inspecting her bare nails.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e worker鈥檚 hands ... but the necessity keeps us having to work,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f we start rolling back the very little protections workers have and have fought for, it will be incredibly hard to find a dignified job.鈥

OSHA is working on a rule to prevent heat injury and illness in the workplace, it last year. That process usually takes years, however, and members of Congress like Mr. Casar want to accelerate it. Last week President Joe Biden also announced aswath of federal actions that will take effect soon, including increasing inspections of high-risk workplaces like construction and agriculture, and improving weather forecasts.听

鈥淚t would be fair to say it鈥檚 the most heat-focused administration in the country鈥檚 history,鈥 says Dr. Keith at the University of Arizona.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e addressing this in the way you鈥檇 hope: a whole-of-government response through multiple agencies,鈥 he adds. 鈥淗aving said that, we鈥檙e at the very early days of heat governance.鈥

And the workplace is one of many arenas where more awareness of heat safety is needed, experts say, especially as extreme heat begins to touch every corner of the country.

鈥淭his summer is not a preview of the future,鈥 says Dr. Keith. 鈥淭he climate we鈥檙e living in today [has] already been influenced by climate change, and the future will be even hotter unless we drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions.鈥

In June, shipping company UPS reached an agreement with the Teamsters union to in all of its new trucks. It鈥檚 part of a larger tentative agreement in July that, if accepted, would avoid a strike by over 340,000 unionized employees around the country.

Oregon offers heat safety lessons

There were no heat safety rules in Oregon in 2021 when a deadly heat wave hit the Pacific Northwest. The 54 people who died didn鈥檛 have air conditioning at home, and only a half-dozen had portable air-conditioning units, most of which were either unplugged or not working, the county medical examiner. In total, roughly 1,200 people from Oregon to British Columbia may have died of heat-related illnesses , almost matching the total number of deaths in .听

Two years later Oregon is poised to become a national leader in heat safety. The new enacted by the state last year 鈥 which include detailed requirements around access to shade, access to drinking water, and training for supervisors and employees 鈥 are the only heat safety rules in the country that apply to both outdoor and indoor workers.

Ms. Constible of the听Natural Resources Defense Councilis 鈥渕ost excited鈥 about the Oregon rules, 鈥渂ut it鈥檚 too early to tell if it鈥檚 working,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd as with any regulation, enforcement is key.鈥

Detailed heat safety rules are already in place in other areas, such as sports and the military. The U.S. Marine Corps has used flag conditions听corresponding to temperature and heat acclimation of personnel听to train safely since the 1950s. The U.S. Army created a heat center at Fort Moore (formerly Fort Benning) that researches and shares heat safety information with other military branches.

鈥淭hese aren鈥檛 some lefty wacko ideas,鈥 says Ms. Constible.

鈥淚 really hope we can come together to find a solution to a preventable problem that has the chance to take away a family member, a loved one,鈥 she adds.

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