Op-Ed: Prosecuting Safety Violations that Lead to Worker Deaths

Ars Technica » Scientific Method 2016-06-04

Summary:

CPR's Rena Steinzor and Katherine Tracy had an op-ed in the Sacramento Bee over the weekend highlighting the reluctance of police and prosecutors to treat worker deaths as if they were anything but mere accidents. In fact, they're often the result of illegal cost-cutting and safety shortcuts by employers, behavior that sometimes warrants criminal charges. They write: "When a worker dies because a trench collapses, and it turns out that managers sacrificed safety to get the job done faster, that's a crime. When managers operate factories with equipment that doesn't have an accessible emergency shut-off switch and an employee is crushed or loses a limb, those managers should be indicted. But with few exceptions, police and prosecutors treat worker deaths and injuries as unforeseeable "accidents" that can't be prevented. So too many companies think they can save money by cutting corners and view the fines involved as a cost of doing business."

Link:

http://www.progressivereform.org/CPRBlog.cfm?idBlog=5122F086-9FF5-FE8E-A20CE75068A5B81D

From feeds:

Berkeley Law Library -- Reference & Research Services » Center for Progressive Reform

Tags:

Authors:

Matthew Freeman

Date tagged:

06/04/2016, 00:52

Date published:

06/01/2016, 08:37