The nonprofit organization Human Rights Watch has just released a report describing the risks faced by child farmworkers in the US. Their findings include the following:
Children risk pesticide poisoning, serious injury, and heat illness. They suffer fatalities at more than four times the rate of children working in other jobs. Some work without even the most basic protective gear, including shoes or gloves. Many told Human Rights Watch that their employers did not provide drinking water, hand-washing facilities, or toilets. Girls and women in these jobs are exceptionally vulnerable to sexual abuse.
The country’s estimated 300,000-400,000 child farmworkers aren’t covered by the same restrictions on work hours and hazardous work that apply to children in other industries. Human Rights Watch notes that even existing laws covering child farworkers are poorly enforced. David Crary reports in the Associated Press that Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis is adding more field investigators to improve enforcement, and legislation introduced by US Representative Lucille Roybal-Allard would eliminate the discrepancies between the law regarding child farmworkers and children employed in other industries.
In other news:
CNN: Two gas explosions in the Raspadskaya mine in Western Siberia have killed 52 workers, and 38 people are still missing. At least 18 of the dead are rescue workers who entered after the first blast and were killed by the second explosion.
Charleston Gazette: Delores Bragg and Freda Hatfield, whose husbands Don Bragg and Ellery Hatfield were killed in the 2006 Aracoma Alma mine disaster, have filed a lawsuit against the Mine Safety and Health Administration for not citing violations at the mine that could have been corrected and prevented the fire that killed the two mineworkers.
ProPublica: Federal stimulus money is funding a cleanup of the Hanford Nuclear Reservation. Newly employed cleanup workers are happy to have the jobs, but they don’t seem to be getting adequate training on the risks of beryllium disease and how to limit their exposure.
San Francisco Chronicle: A respiratory therapist and a police officer became ill with bacterial meningitis after exposure to a patient who had the disease; now, Cal/OSHA has fined the medical center and the police and fire departments a total of more than $135,000 for failing to limit emergency workers’ exposure.
Occupational Health & Safety: OSHA has cited Lowe’s Home Centers for repeatedly failing to document and report employees’ injuries and illnesses; the proposed penalties total $110,000.
3 comments
Comments feed for this article
June 15, 2010 at 11:49 am
Patty
I’m very pleased to read that Human Rights watch is taking steps to protect workers and especially children and women. But reading about the drinking water reminded me of how my community’s water supply has been polluted.
About 2007, thanks to the (SSP) Sludge Safety Project, it was discovered that the wells the communities depended on for water from everything from cooking, drinking to bathing had hazardous compounds from coal slurry injections. Just to name a few:
aluminum, arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium, calcium chromium, cobalt, copper, iron, lead, manganese, magnesium, nickel, potassium, selenium, sodium, silicon, and zinc. I’m sure there are more but you get the idea.
Please keep in mind that these can be absorbed through the skin also.
I’m very pleased to report that part of the community has gotten the WV Water lines into their homes. But that still leaves a 6-7 miles without any water except well water.
But I do believe there needs to be more studies done on how much exposure and the levels of exposure over long periods of time can do to humans.
I firmly believe the EPA should take a hard look at both the primary, secondary and tertiary standards.
Example: sodium is considered by the EPA safe drinking water standards to be tertiary. But if one has high blood pressure or after continued exposure in one’s drinking, cooking and bathing water I feel certain this can contribute to high blood pressure.
The federal EPA does not enforce secondary and tertiary drinking water standards. Thus the tertiary known effects are limited or occur over a long period of time; therefore the federal government does not state quantifiable limits of intake.
Everyone deserves clean, healthy water to drink. I for one would love to see the EPA take a good hard look at our drinking water standards nationwide.
I’m sure there are more water problems in other communities across the nation.
October 11, 2010 at 5:57 am
Nikita
Its good to be back in your blog. I found lot of something new again and I learn a lot again. Let me give credits Life’s Too Good in your blog… Thank you so musch and post more contents again.
September 16, 2011 at 10:19 am
organic meat winnipeg
They do a good job in terms of water in North America as other controls get sick from the water they drink. We need water to live so we should put the effort in to make sure everyone at the very least has clean water to drink.