WASHINGTON, DC— Today, Senators Edward M. Kennedy and Patty Murray released
the following statements in response to the long awaited action of the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration, which published its final rule requiring employers to
pay for workers’ safety equipment. A court had imposed a November 30th deadline for
the agency to issue the rule.
Senator Kennedy, Chairman of the Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee,
said, “Year after year, OSHA has been AWOL on this issue. Finally, facing courtordered
deadlines, they’ve done the right thing by requiring employers to pay for the
equipment that workers need to do their jobs safely. It is time for OSHA to act on other
long-delayed safety needs. Employees deserve an agency that takes the initiative to
protect them – not an agency that responds only to a court order or a Congressional
mandate.”
"Common sense dictates that working men and women should not have to foot the bill for
the equipment that keeps them safe in the workplace," said Senator Murray, Chair of the
Senate HELP Subcommittee on Employment and Workplace Safety. "That's why Senator
Kennedy and I have been pushing for years to get the Administration to include the safety
of employees as a cost of doing business. I'm glad that the Department of Labor has
finally ruled, but it's unfortunate that it takes an angry chorus of Congress, courts, and
workers for this Administration to act."
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Press Contact
Melissa Wagoner (Kennedy) (202) 224-2633 Alex Glass (Murray) (202) 224-2834