OSHA Seeks Input on Hazardous Chemicals in Need of Agency Action
WASHINGTON -- OSHA seeks stakeholder input in identifying
hazardous chemicals for which OSHA should develop exposure
reduction strategies.
Workers exposed to chemicals suffer injuries and illnesses that
can damage virtually all body parts and systems, including the
lungs, skin, liver, kidneys, eyes, and mucous membranes.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics indicates that workers suffered
more than 55,000 illnesses related to chemical exposures in 2007
and nearly 17,500 chemical-related injuries and illnesses
resulted in workers spending days away from work. This is likely
an underestimate because often the effects of chemical exposures
are frequently not recognized until years after exposure.
As a result, work-related disease often goes unreported since a
worker or physician may not attribute the effect to an exposure
that occurred on the job many years before.
During its first two years of existence, OSHA established
approximately 400 permissible exposure limits (PELs) for
hazardous chemicals based on then-existing national consensus or
federal standards. Since then, OSHA has been able to develop
more protective regulations for only 29 chemicals, while the
majority of OSHA PELs have remained unchanged.
"Many of our permissible exposure limits are based on 1950s-era
science that we now realize is inadequate to protect workers in
21st century workplaces," said Assistant Secretary of Labor for
OSHA David Michaels. "We must assure the protection of workers
currently exposed to well-recognized chemical hazards for which
we have an inadequate PEL or no PEL at all. I am hopeful that
this forum will assist us in achieving that goal by helping us
to identify those chemicals on which we should be focusing our
efforts."
An online forum was held Aug. 16 to allow stakeholders to
identify harmful chemicals and explain why OSHA should focus on
these chemicals in developing long- and short-term solutions for
reducing workers' exposure.
Interested parties can complete a nomination form at
http://www.osha.gov/pelforum.html. Nominations will be
accepted until August 27.