[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 95 (Wednesday, June 23, 2010)]
[House]
[Page H4735]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
WHAT YOU DON'T KNOW . . .
The SPEAKER pro tempore. Under a previous order of the House, the
gentlewoman from New York (Mrs. Maloney) is recognized for 5 minutes.
Mrs. MALONEY. Madam Speaker, according to the latest figures from
OSHA, at this time there are over 27,000 workers employed by BP or its
contractors and more than 2,000 Federal employees directly involved in
the massive cleanup operation now underway in the gulf coast. At a
hearing last week, another Federal agency, the CDC, tried to assure
Congress that it was doing all it could to keep these workers safe and
that it is closely tracking surveillance data across the Gulf Coast
States for health effects that may be related to the oil spill. This
was good to hear.
But a workshop held by the Institute of Medicine down in New Orleans
this week made one thing abundantly clear. When there are that many
people engaged in such a complex cleanup effort of such unprecedented
size over such an unforeseeably long time, the true danger levels for
exposure simply are not known. As a story in USA Today put it: ``While
some health officials say they don't think long-term illnesses are
likely, they've never seen pollution of this scale, and there are just
too many unknowns to say for sure.''
The Institute for Medicine workshop participants noted that proper
protective gear can help keep exposure at safe levels, but the problem
comes when heat and humidity cause workers to remove their gear. The
average daytime high temperatures in New Orleans for the next 2 months
is 91, very hot and very humid.
Now, consider an assessment of BP's overall attitude toward worker
safety that was contained in a letter sent to BP by an OSHA official
back in May: ``The organizational systems that BP has in place,
particularly those related to worker safety and health training,
protective equipment, and site monitoring, are not adequate for the
current situation or the projected increase in cleanup operations.''
The letter also noted that ``these are not isolated problems. They
appear to be indicative of a general systematic failure on BP's part to
ensure the safety and health of those responding to this disaster.''
The unknowable risks of an environmental disaster of this scale, the
foreseeable weather conditions of the near future, and the known
failures of BP in the recent past should all raise some great big red
warning flags for OSHA, for the Centers for Disease Control, and for
NIOSH. I am writing OSHA to ensure that the workers have the proper
protective gear, such as respirators, in order to ensure their safety
and to protect their health.
This is a region of the country that was previously devastated by a
natural disaster that was made worse by the Bush administration's
failure to respond with timely assistance and adequate safeguards. Many
lost their lives. The gulf coast is now under siege by a manmade
disaster. Far too many have already lost their livelihood. The entire
region is at risk for losing a way of life. No one should also lose
their health simply because we failed to help them when more help was
clearly needed.
In my great City of New York, we have witnessed firsthand the
terrible price that can be paid over time by those who labor day after
day in a toxic environment helping their city recover from a terrible
blow on 9/11. I hope that this Congress will do everything in its power
to ensure that those who have been asked to clean up this mess and are
cleaning up this mess are not asked to pay for their efforts with the
loss of their health.
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