[Congressional Record Volume 158, Number 32 (Wednesday, February 29, 2012)]
[House]
[Page H1021]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
MORE REGULATION
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Michigan (Mr. Walberg) for 5 minutes.
Mr. WALBERG. With Michigan's unemployment rate consistently higher
than the national average, I remain committed to thoroughly reviewing
the implications of burdensome regulations that have the potential to
overwhelm my State's and country's job creators.
A current effort by the Department of Labor is a new standard being
considered by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration called
the Injury and Illness Prevention Program, or I2P2. The standard will
require all employers to implement safety and health programs to ``find
and fix'' all hazards in their workplace, even those not otherwise
regulated.
This regulation could potentially impact every employer covered by
OSHA unless OSHA exempts small employers or those with less hazardous
workplaces. Many employers who voluntarily issued safety and health
programs have improved their workplaces' safety culture, but there are
serious problems about this standard that OSHA has not addressed.
The moment this regulation gets issued, safety and health programs
will go from being a good idea to a legal requirement, which means
employers will have to meet OSHA's standards rather than what works
best for them and their employees and what is indicated as best in best
practices.
OSHA will have the authority to come in and second-guess an employer
about how well they have implemented their program. Not surprisingly
then, job creators see the I2P2 regulation as just another OSHA
enforcement tool rather than something that will help them enhance
their safety practices.
But they're not the only ones.
A recent RAND study found that California's I2P2 regulation, which
has been in place since 1991, has not prevented workplace fatalities
and barely made a dent in total injury prevention. Many job creators
are worried that OSHA will double dip on citations, issuing one
citation for a hazard and another citation because the safety and
health program failed to detect and correct the hazard. Talk about
double jeopardy.
Finally, another problem is whether employers will be required to
find and fix ergonomics hazards. The Clinton administration issued an
ergonomic regulation in 2000 that was shot down, thankfully, by
Congress.
OSHA will soon hold a small business panel to ask job creators across
the country their opinion and insight on I2P2. I hope the Obama
administration, against its pattern, listens to the concerns of these
business owners instead of imposing a costly regulation that we have
proof will not improve worker safety. Imposing a new and costly safety
and health program standard will only serve to increase OSHA
enforcement with no visible improvement to worker safety and safe
health.
As Ronald Reagan once said:
It is not my intention to do away with government. It is,
rather, to make it work for us, not over us; to stand by our
side, not ride on our back.
It's my hope we remain committed to this principle and ensure that
regulations ensure both productivity and job creation and true health
and safety of our workforce.
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