OSHA Kicks Off Youth Job
Safety Campaign
WASHINGTON
-- Secretary of Labor Elaine L. Chao has
kicked off OSHA’s national 2008 Teen Summer
Job Safety Campaign.
"The Teen Summer Job Safety Campaign
educates teenagers on the importance of
workplace safety and health habits that will
help protect them and their coworkers at
work," Secretary Chao said.
OSHA launched the fourth year of its youth
public awareness campaign on NBC’s Today
Show at Rockefeller Plaza in New York City,
where the agency and teens from SkillsUSA
demonstrated safe work practices for some of
the most common tasks that teens are likely
to encounter in summer jobs.
SkillsUSA, an OSHA national Alliance Program
participant, is a nonprofit organization
serving teachers and high school and college
students who are preparing for careers in
trade, technical and skilled service
occupations.
OSHA will host and participate in local
events and activities around the country to
help keep teenagers safe and healthy on the
job. Activities include career fairs, youth
programs, expos, career days and training
seminars. OSHA and its regional partners are
striving to reduce work-related injuries
among teens by teaching them on-the-job
safety and integration of principles into
their work tasks from this early age.
Through working with many strong national
and regional Alliance Program participants
and other cooperative programs, OSHA plans
to reach more than three million teens.
Workplaces are safer than they have ever
been with fatality and injury and illness
rates declining to record lows in this
administration. The injury and illness rate
was 4.4 per 100 employees and the
work-related fatality rate was 4.0
fatalities per 100,000 employees in 2006,
the latest data available. Since OSHA's
inception in 1971, U.S. employment has
increased from 56 million employees at 3.5
million worksites to more than 135 million
employees at 8.9 million worksites.
"Programs like the Teen Summer Job Safety
Campaign help create a culture of safety,"
said Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health Edwin G.
Foulke Jr. "Our goal is to continue to drive
down the number of occupational injuries
among teens, especially in the construction
industry."
The campaign is part of OSHA's Young Worker
Initiative, which provides information and
resources to teenagers, parents, educators
and employers to ensure safe and rewarding
work experiences for these summer employees.
More information about workplace safety for
teens is available at
www.osha.gov/teens.
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