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Public Employee Press
Waiting for PESH
By JANE LaTOUR
The state Labor Department’s Public Employee Safety and Health Bureau
is like a glacier, very powerful but extremely slow.
PESH can cite violations, set deadlines for compliance and — unlike
many regulatory bodies — PESH can levy fines on other public agencies.
PESH can get action, as it did this year at the city’s Pier 76 Tow
Pound. Some of the serious hazards PEP found there in March 2003 have
been fixed (see photos).
But in many areas, this vital enforcement mechanism for safety and health
violations seems frozen in place.
The Department of Finance proudly hailed 66 John St. as a state-of-the-art
facility when it opened in Spring 2001. City agencies there — including
the Administration for Children’s Services and the Departments of
Consumer Affairs, Health and Mental Hygiene and Environmental Protection
— often sell permits and collect fines. DOF installed tight building
security measures, designed to protect money and office equipment but
not the employees.
It takes an electronic keycard to open many of the doors, even those that
lead to emergency exits. These doors do not automatically unlock unless
someone triggers a fire alarm or the power goes out. In October 2001,
right after the 9/11 attack, DC 37’s Safety and Health Dept. filed
a PESH complaint, charging that these security measures violate emergency
escape standards.
It took almost two years for PESH to inspect and issue violations. The
city demanded a re-inspection and PESH withdrew its violations and re-inspected
the building in July. No new report has been issued and the dangerous
doors remain locked.
The Dept. of Transportation failed to include Highway Repairers in its
required Exposure Control Plan to minimize the threat of blood borne diseases
such as HIV and Hepatitis B to the agency’s workers.
In October 2002, an HR was stuck by a needle while he cleaned up debris
under Bruckner Boulevard. The
employee, a member of Local 376, was taken to a hospital that was unfamiliar
with the correct HIV post-exposure protocol.
The union requested a PESH inspection, which finally began eight months
later. Debris clearing was suspended during this time, but DOT did not
revise its ECP, assess the hazards or write a plan to minimize the danger.
In August 2003, PESH outlined five Serious Violations. On Oct. 31, 2003,
a full year after the worker was stuck, PESH issued a Notice of Violation
and Order to Comply. Only then were new procedures implemented.
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