Florida News Connection
November 1, 2021 |
By: Trimmel Gomes
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. --
Gov. Ron DeSantis' newest battle with the Biden administration involves
dropping Florida out of the nation's workplace-safety agency, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA).
In the governor's official call for a special session, he
wants "the State to evaluate whether it should assert jurisdiction over
occupational safety and health issues for government and private
employees." In other words, lawmakers will discuss whether the state
should create its own agency to replace OSHA.
Theresa King, president of the Florida Building and Construction Trade Council,
said federal protections are life-saving for her industry and should not be
tampered with to win political pointed.
"It would totally disrupt the safety mechanisms that are in place, that
are known, that we have in the construction industry and with the clients that
we work for when we go onto their property to work," King asserted.
The controversy is an offshoot of Biden's call for OSHA to require employers
with 100 or more workers to implement a COVID-19 vaccine-or-weekly-testing
mandate, but the proposal is still under review by the White House. Florida's
special session is scheduled for Nov. 15-19.
According to OSHA, there are currently 22 State Plans covering both
private-sector and state and local government workers.
Dr. Rich Templin, director of politics and public policy for the Florida
AFL-CIO, which represents more than 1 million union members, retirees, and
their families in the state, said Florida's history of eliminating its own
Department of Labor 20 years ago already reduced protections for public-sector
workers.
"For the same state government to now say they want to pull everybody else
in Florida out of the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, that's
terrifying because they've already shown that they have no interest and no
commitment to put something in its place," Templin argued.
Templin stressed such a massive change should require all stakeholders to have
a say in the process.
Republican leaders contend Florida having its own agency could limit what they
see as federal-government overreach. However, any state worker safety plan must
still get OSHA approval, a process that could take years beyond the current
political fight.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida
News Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service. Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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