November/December 2005
Transcription
November/December 2005
CAW HEALTH, SAFETY AND ENVIRONMENT NEWSLETTER Published by CAW Health and Safety Department 205 Placer Court, Toronto, Ontario M2H 3H9 Telephone 416-495-6558 or 1-800-268-5763 Fax 416-495-3785 E-mail: [email protected] www.caw.ca/healthsafetyenvironment Volume 13 No. 6 November/December 2005 Compensation Committee and Nick De Carlo of the CAW Health and Safety Department, the fight for reforming the workers’ compensation system to ensure workers who become injured or ill as a result of their work, receive workers’ compensation benefits, is being fought hard and won in the trenches. Conferences like this one help us to ensure we share our struggles and our successes. OCCUPATIONAL DISEASES Can Be Prevented But first they must be recognized! The focus of our CAW Workers’ Compensation Conference October 4-6 in Port Elgin was on occupational diseases, RSIs and stress. So many CAW members have suffered from occupational diseases, repetitive strain injuries, back injuries and stress yet so many have not received workers’ compensation benefits. This is unacceptable. Dave Wilken and Nick De Carlo The conference addressed these issues in both plenary and workshop sessions: What is the experience in dealing with occupational disease? What steps do we have to take to address the issue? What are the latest developments in occupational disease policy? How are repetitive strain claims best dealt with? What are the policy issues? How do we effectively address RSI in the workplace? How do we deal with workplace pressures? And finally, how do we use these issues to build our campaign to change the compensation system? Gary Parent As employers put greater pressure on our members with respect to competition for jobs we are seeing more and more of our members suffering from repetitive strain injuries and stress. We also know that thousands of workers are afflicted by occupational disease with few realizing it or claiming for it. These are major issues of concern to our union and our membership. Under the leadership of the CAW Council Workers’ 1 Cathy Walker went through the letter-writing campaign to the Ontario Minister of Labour. All of the participants wrote personal, hand-written letters to the Minister on the need for an ergonomics regulation. Mary Cook Occupational Diseases Representatives of the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board, Maureen Mullen and Joe Cichello explained that things have changed for the better at the WSIB concerning occupational disease. Dave Wilken of IAVGO (Injured Accident Victims Group of Ontario) explained the hoops that workers and unions have to go through in order to establish occupational disease claims. John Oudyk from OHCOW (Occupational Health Clinics for Ontario Workers) explained the risks of occupational asthma. Dr. Jim McKenzie OCCUPATIONAL DISEASE CLUSTERS CAW Workplaces and Locals We are working with a number of our locals and OHCOW (Occupational Health Clinic for Ontario Workers) on clusters of occupational disease for a number of CAW workplaces. RSI Claims Peterborough - General Electric and Ventra Plastics Catherine Fenech & Peter Page Constanza Duran from Injured Workers Consultants gave and introduction to attempting to establish RSI claims and was followed by Dr. Jim MacKenzie and Mary Cook from OHCOW. Injured Workers Movement activists Steve Mantis and Catherine Fenech were on hand to explain the suffering of workers who experience work-related injuries and their campaigns to fight back to establish claims. The campaign for an ergonomics regulation was an important conclusion to the day’s session where Paul Edwards and Judy Kondrat There have been ongoing efforts by OHCOW’s Toronto clinic to see and assess the over 800 workers who came out to two CAW clinics in May of last year. So far this has led to filing a number of workers’ compensation claims. After an extensive amount of organizing in the community and political lobbying we have been successful in getting funding 2 policy issues still being reviewed by or debated with the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB). We are also part of efforts to challenge the WSIB policy on Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease at the WSIAT (Workplace Safety and Insurance Appeals Tribunal). The WSIB only partly compensates workers found to have suffered from this disease. for OHCOW for the Peterborough project. This covers time for doctors, nurse, hygienist and administration. We are also working with the Peterborough and District Labour Council to build a labour campaign for the recognition of occupational and environmental disease as a public health issue and for labour and community input into the plans and activities of the public health unit. There is also an extensive amount of work remaining with respect to reviewing files and responding to questions from workers and their families as part of the process of closing of files. In some respects the work will not end for a long time as new specific questions and issues arise related to claims already in and as those who are still getting sick due to the long latency period between exposure and the development of occupational disease, approach the local to file new claims. So far the claims filed are as follows: General Electric: Claims Filed: 175, 48 of which are for workers who are deceased. Claims Allowed - 13 lung cancer; 1 kidney cancer; 1 laryngeal cancer; 1 colon cancer; 1 asbestosis; 2 pleural plaques Types of claims filed: Cancers claims – lung, mesothelioma, stomach, bladder, lymphoma and nonHodgkins lymphoma, leukemia, kidney, laryngeal, esophageal, gastro-intestinal, tongue, pancreas, skin and; Claims for asbestosis, berylliosis, and asthma. Ventra Plastics: Claims filed – 9 Claims filed for non-Hodgkins lymphoma, asthma, lung fibrosis, asthma and neurological damage. Maureen Mullen, WSIB Steve Sharpe, President of CAW Local 456 has been taking over the work since the death of Karen Willsey. Sister Willsey is sorely missed by all in the local and the community. Brother Sharpe is being assisted by Brent Davis of the Office of the Worker Advisor. Owen Sound - PPG Approximately 70 workers came out to an intake clinic held in conjunction with Local 248 last November. The Hamilton OHCOW clinic is working with our members to do assessments and determine which workers are suffering from occupational illness. Nine claims have been filed to date. General Chemical We are working with Local 89 and OHCOW Windsor to follow up on a cluster of 5 brain cancers coming out of the General Chemical plant in Amherstburg. All of these workers are deceased. OHCOW has conducted extensive research which points to exposure at General Chemical as a contributor to these cancers. So far only one claim has been accepted. Holmes Foundry The number of new claims at Holmes Foundry from exposures to asbestos, silica, isocyanates and other foundry and insulation hazards is winding down to a trickle. Many years of hard work have yielded significant results in terms of compensation (well over $20 million) to workers, their families and the community. Several major hurdles remain. There are claims that have not yet been resolved due to 3 (Windsor, St. Catharines, London, Barrie, Thunder Bay, Timmins, Sudbury, Sarnia, Hamilton, Peterborough and from four different injured worker groups and communities in Toronto). The focus of the conference was building the capacity and outreach of injured workers. CAW members are active in organizing injured workers in Timmins, Windsor, St. Catharines and London. CAW Workers’ Compensation Instructors VERN EDWARDS On Occupational Diseases Constanza Duran and Steve Mantis We have been suggesting that the health care costs to taxpayers from occupational disease cases not recognized by the WSIB could be as high as one billion dollars. No one in government has challenged this. Many injured workers were attending this kind of event for the first time. Their reaction was “I didn’t know this kind of organization existed”. They left the conference determined to be active in the movement and to organize others. I have received a research report from the National Cancer Institute of Canada (NCIC). Approximately one tenth of one percent of the NCIC’s cancer research budget was for research into occupational cancer. In 1999 it was for a single research project looking at the connection between solvents and breast cancer. Considering that they (NCIC) estimate that nine percent of cancer deaths are caused by work, this is an area significantly underfunded. The immediate organizing focus for the injured worker movement is demonstrations across the province to take place on December 9th. Cathy Walker, Director of the Health & Safety Department will be addressing injured workers’ demonstrations in Toronto and St. Catharines on December 9th. CLIMATE CHANGE Vern Edwards, Occupational Health and Safety Director Ontario Federation of Labour Campaign for Kyoto INJURED WORKERS’ MOVEMENT In Solidarity, December 9th Demonstrations We have been working closely with the Ontario Network of injured Workers Groups (ONIWG), of which we are associate members, to rebuild the injured worker movement. ONIWG recently had a successful conference on September 27th with injured worker delegates from 10 different cities 4 2050 are required to have hope for stabilizing the situation. The Government of Canada is hosting the Eleventh Conference of the Parties (COP 11) to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and the first Meeting of the Parties (MOP 1) to the Kyoto Protocol 28 November to 9 December 2005 at the Palais des Congrès in Montréal, Québec. The most important objective of this conference is negotiating what will happen beyond the Kyoto deadline (2012) regarding international efforts to reduce greenhouse gases. As a result there is a major effort to unite labour, environmentalists and other supporters to come to Montreal to participate in the many activities taking place at and around COP11/MOP1. The objective is to put a public focus on the issue and the role that Canada plays. The UN conference begins a process likely to last several years to develop the post 2012 plan. The department, under the leadership of Assistant to the President, Peggy Nash, will be joining with the CLC and other unions to support these efforts and build awareness among our environmental activists – giving them the tools to educate our membership and build support. Our union will be focussing on the following two events: Wednesday December 7, 1.0-3.0 pm: ICFTU Trade Union Side Event, with the title, National Frameworks for the World of Work”. Thursday December 8, all day: Canadian Labour Congress Forum with international union and environmental speakers and discussion of strategy in Canada. The meetings are expected to attract more than 7,000 participants from the Convention's 189 Parties as well as from non-governmental organizations, intergovernmental organizations and the world's media. Because Canada is chairing the conference it will play a pivotal role. Our union is sending a leadership group to meet with Canadian Government officials and participate in the CLC and ICFTU meetings of December 7th and 8th. The focus of the two weeks will be on consolidating the Kyoto process by formally accepting ratification, refining the mechanisms that need to be put in place, and to begin the next round of negotiations for what will happen after 2012 when the period covered by the Kyoto Accord ends. Obviously there are concerns that the US, Australia, and industry interests will try to stall the international climate change process. In addition, December 3rd is an international day to focus attention on climate change. We will be encouraging our activists to participate in events in their community. PLANET IN FOCUS Films on Environment At a conference of the Climate Action Network, internationally renowned experts reported that the predicted effects of climate change have been verified by experience. In fact the warming effects are taking place faster and more precipitously than originally expected. International co-operation to address climate change is more vital than ever and time for decisive action is running out. Significant reductions in the order of 30% by 2020 and 80% by Planet in Focus is an environmental film festival held each year in Toronto. This winter, as part of their mandate to bring environmental films to the community, they are organizing a cross country tour to do showings in communities from coast to coast. A key objective of the tour is to make films accessible 5 in small communities. In fact they are more interested in reaching workers in communities than in big box office showings. They are also EXTENDED PRODUCER very interested in working with our local unions and using union halls for showings. Jobs for the Auto Industry RESPONSIBILITY A committee with representatives from each of the CAW Big Three Councils has been set up to look at the strategies for deepening our campaign for Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in the auto industry. The committee has had its first meeting and another is scheduled for the week of the December Council. The committee is developing a plan of action based on a specific analysis of the issues posed by the situation in the Canadian auto industry and is working with other organizations to research the issues. The CAW is participating in these efforts by encouraging our locals to sponsor an environmental film event in their local or/and to join a broader film event in their community. A film festival can be a tool to increase interest in the environment in the local union memberships. It should also help activists in locals which do not have large or active environment committees. They can use it to build interest and to find others who might want to join the committee. EPR has been put on the agenda at each of the Big Three as a result of agreements in the recent set of negotiations reached at each of them to meet with our committees to review developments in this area as part of a review of new technologies in the auto industry. FOOD You Are What You Eat Representing the CAW Health and Safety Department, Nick De Carlo attended the 3rd National Food Security Assembly September 30 October 2 in Waterloo that set in place the structures of a national organization for food security. The right to healthy food is increasingly being seen as an important reference point to understand how environmental degradation is affecting our health and future; to organize awareness of the level of the importance of the environment our lives; to build environmentally safe alternatives for future development; and to build alliances between social justice organizations, environmentalists and the labour movement. John Oudyk, Heat Stress Expert We are working with Planet in Focus to determine locations where screenings could take place. The “mini festivals” could be anything from an evening to a three day weekend event – depending on the location and the interest. The objectives of the conference were to Strengthen Canada's food security movement through learning, and sharing diverse approaches led by rural, urban and aboriginal communities. There would be several common films for showing across the country and others that could be chosen specifically tailored to the community (union local) in which they are showing. We will consult on the selection of films. 6 Despite those findings, train engineers say CN increased the length of trains using the track to as many as 130 cars after it took over BC Rail in 2004. Contribute towards skill development, capacity building, networking, and information sharing among the multi sectoral stakeholders in the food system. Establish the national food security organization But after the most recent incident, Lapierre ordered CN to cut the length of conventional trains along the route to 80 cars and threatened to launch a public inquiry if CN does not act quickly to improve safety performance. The CLC participated in forming this new national organization and is encouraging affiliates to join and support it. We will be reporting these developments to the food workers’ sector of our union. CN purchased BC Rail for $1 billion from the B.C. government two years ago and incorporated the provincial railway into its North American system in July 2004. CN RAIL KNEW OF DANGERS But still increased train length Since August there have been three notable derailments along the BCR line, including one involving nine cars near Horseshoe Bay last week, and a chemical spill that devastated fish populations in the Cheakamus River. CN Rail, threatened by Transport Minister Jean Lapierre with a public inquiry after a series of derailments on the former BC Rail line, knew as early as 1997 that the line posed exceptional hazards to rail traffic. Transport Canada is still allowing trains longer than 80 cars to use the former BC Rail line as long as CN puts remotely operated locomotives at midpoint on the train -- although the Transportation Safety Board has noted that remote locomotives failed to engage during the Cheakamus spill. According to CAW Local 110, the union representing train engineers on the former BC Rail line, CN has cut the number of trains along the route to one per day, compared to three per day when BC Rail was an independent operator. That led to a corresponding increase in the number of cars on each train -- from 80 to 130 in keeping with a nationwide CN initiative to boost train length. CAW Local 110 president Todd Wallace said Tuesday the change has added to the risk of derailment. A March 2003 study by the National Research Council of Canada, based on CN-BCR research conducted in 1997, noted that BC Rail standards were "generally more restrictive" in terms of track building standards and maintenance than the Transport Canada standards governing national railroads such as CN, which normally operate on straighter tracks and on flatter terrain. "Our one big concern is the train length that they're running now as opposed to what they were running with BC Rail," Wallace said. In some instances, the study noted, BC Rail had tightened its operational standards for twists and "They run a totally different kind of operation on that grade than BC Rail did. It's very technically demanding and we don't really believe CN appreciates how difficult that is. turns to a degree significantly higher than Transport Canada's "in order to reduce derailments and improve track safety." "Most of their railway [across Canada] is fairly flat and the curvature is good." 7 Wallace also noted that the majority of senior BC Rail engineers took buyouts and that younger engineers do not have as much experience in dealing with the demanding nature of the line. good." "What that means is that, whilst from a geometry standpoint the track wasn't very good, it was actually safe to run on because the forces are low," Sawley said. "There is a little bit of pressure put on our members and a lot of the senior engineers we had, especially down there [based in Greater Vancouver], are gone. They took buyouts when CN took over. We have a handful of more junior engineers, and they are under a little bit more pressure, most definitely, especially with the shortage of crews and the CN marshalling restrictions." However, Conservative transportation critic James Moore said the study adds further strength to his argument that the federal Liberals have failed to make needed updates to the Canadian transportation act. Moore claimed the Liberals have been preoccupied with airline regulation and security since the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attack on the World Trade Center towers in New York. "When it comes to transport policy, the federal Liberals haven't gotten their legs back under them yet," Moore said. He noted that a non-partisan review of the Canada Transportation Act has 92 recommendations in it, including new regulations on rail safety. "So this is something that is not totally unpredictable given the lack of focus that Ottawa has had on transportation for going on four years now." CN spokesman Mark Hallman said the company's statistics show there have been fewer derailments along the line since the takeover. "It is substantially lower than it was when it was run by the B.C. provincial government," Hallman said. He added that CN had taken steps to lessen the risk of derailments even before Lapierre issued his notice, including an internal safety audit. "Our investigations so far have not turned up any common thread amongst these accidents. We're working as hard as we can." Hallman said the railway's actions include "safety blitzes," operational audits, mechanical inspections and rail track inspections. Meanwhile, an international group of transportation afficionados, lauded CN as a safe railway. "That is borne out in the statistics," said Harry Gow, founding president of Transport 2000 Canada. "That said, CN has an operating philosophy to stuff the maximum number of cars into the minimum number of trains possible." Gow noted that some former CN executives have publicly questioned the wisdom of such extended train lengths, on the premise that the dynamics of trains can be compromised on curved or graded track. "Try to find a straight, flat piece of track on BC Rail. Even if it's flat, it's curved. Going around Horseshoe Bay up to Squamish, it's like a snake, even if it's at water level. Then you get into the mountains and it's both curved and graded. The 2003 study made several recommendations aimed at gleaning more information about the potential risks posed by track curves such as those on the former BC Rail line, but a government spokesman said there has been no follow-up. Instead, the federal government is awaiting the results of a similar study being undertaken by a U.S. railway transport agency, said Kevin Sawley, director of engineering for the National Research Council's railway vehicles sector. Sawley noted that the 2003 study found that most physical forces that could cause a derailment were "quite low, even at those locations where the track geometry wasn't too "Lengthy trains, particularly if they are composed of a variety of types of cars don't always cope well with that kind of terrain and you sometimes get derailments, as you've seen near Squamish twice lately. "The implication is that train dynamics are going to have to be taken seriously in future and even CN, which is generally a safe railway, is going to have to revisit this issue itself, whatever Transport Canada does." 8 The Health and Safety Course will provide you with the resources to truly be a Health and Safety Activist! This article appeared in the Vancouver Sun on November 9, 2005. NEW PEL HEALTH In Solidarity Sister Kelly Wolff CAW Local 1285 AND SAFETY COURSE Nobody is keeping it a secret! The PEL Health & Safety course was written by Steve Watson of our Education Department with the assistance of the Health & Safety Department. Kelly Wolff is one of our many excellent, rank-and-file discussion leaders. The newly revised and well designed 40 hour Health and Safety program being offered at the CAW Education Center in Port Elgin through our Paid Education Leave (PEL) program is one which all of our CAW members should be encouraged to attend. The course has the ability to draw from participants, passion and enthusiasm leaving them empowered with positive impressions and attitudes. STUDENT POWER Protecting our kids from chemicals By Erica Johnson Georgia Straight, November 3, 2005 Barbara Docherty knew there was something wrong as soon as she opened the door of her son’s elementary school. “It was really stinky,” she says. “The smell just hit me in the face.” The East Vancouver school, Laura Secord elementary, was getting a paint job. According to Docherty, it’s an old school, with small windows and poor ventilation. Docherty’s son told her that kids were covering their faces with their arms in the lunchroom because the paint fumes were so awful. He said he had a really bad headache. And a kid with asthma had an attack. Docherty wondered if the paint was the cause, but she soon discovered that neither she nor her son had the right to find out. PEL, H&S Class The course has adopted a fresh perspective and weaves together many different aspects of the importance of workplace health and safety through a combination of different mediums: video, photography, music, powerful quotations and campaigns. This allows us to recognize our rights, the power behind our voices and to remember the difficult struggles of the workers before our time. “Neither I, as a parent, or my kids are entitled to find out what chemicals are used on the school grounds,” Docherty says. “That seems to be a small problem.” The CAW campaigns inspire, stimulate interest and create awareness. As workers, health and safety is our priority. We are all entitled to a workplace free from harm. We need to know the risks of our hazardous environments and to not allow our employers and governments to intimidate us. Not so small, according to Mae Burrows, executive director of the Labour Environmental Alliance Society (LEAS). She’s worried about the number of potentially toxic chemicals that kids are exposed to in schools and on school grounds and says that information shouldn’t be kept secret from parents and students. “Workers—teachers, janitors, and secretaries—have the right to know what hazardous materials they may be exposed to on school property, but that right doesn’t extend to parents and students. They’re powerless.” Over the course of the week, the program reaches out, allowing for discussion on strategies and tactics for mobilizing workers. Remember, change begins the determination and courage of the working people. 9 like that shouldn’t be put on walls while children are in class,” Docherty says. “And this painting was supposed to go on for six weeks!” Burrows is calling for a Students’ Environmental Bill of Rights, a bill she’d like to see endorsed by school boards across the province, which would give students and their parents the right to find out what toxic materials are being used in their school. “We’re very concerned about health trends we’re seeing in young people,” Burrows says. “After accidents, childhood cancers are now the leading cause of death in Canadian children. There’ve been huge increases in asthma rates, chemical sensitization, and learning disorders, and I’m hearing about girls hitting puberty as young as seven or eight years old. That’s just not right.” Burrows says parents and students would be amazed to learn how many harmful chemicals are contained in products used to clean walls, carpets, desks, and every corner of a school. She blames chemical manufacturers and savvy media campaigns for convincing us that we need these chemicals. “After the World Wars, chemical manufacturers had to create demand for things like chlorine because chlorine gas wasn’t in high demand anymore,” she says. “So we’ve been taught that ‘more is better’, ‘stronger is better’, ‘chemical is better’.” Burrows and LEAS have three toxic targets on their hit list: carcinogens (substances that can cause cancer), reproductive toxins (which can damage sperm and cause infertility in women), and so-called gender benders, or endocrine disrupters (chemicals whose similarity to hormones confuses the body and disrupts natural hormones). According to Burrows, many of these hazardous ingredients are found in the cleaning products employed to keep schools germfree. But they can also be found in the treated wood used in woodworking class, in the diesel fuel handled by children in automotive workshops, and in the formaldahyde used in science class. The list goes on. “We call it chemical trespass,” Burrows says. “In the past few decades, tens of thousands of new chemicals have hit the market and a lot of them are toxic to human health and the environment. We think students and parents have a fundamental right to know if these chemicals are being used where children are forced by law to spend the majority of their day.” Mae Burrows And unless you’re a worker in a school, the only way you can see the list of substances in use is to find someone who has access to MSDS sheets. “There’s so much fear about this,” Burrows says. “I’ve had people meet me after hours and hand me a brown paper envelope. A lot of people say, ‘I know I shouldn’t be giving you these,’ and we’re talking about freaking MSDS sheets! We shouldn’t have to be so covert about chemicals that are so widely in use.” At Laura Secord elementary, principal Kerri Wallin offered to help Docherty in her quest to find out just what was in the paint. She gave Docherty the list of the paint’s ingredients from the manufacturer, called a Material Safety Data Sheet (MSDS). “Lo and behold, the paint was full of really vile stuff,” Docherty says. “It had a really high VOC level.” When LEAS researchers did an assessment of cleaning products being used in the Burnaby school district three years ago, they were shocked to find methylene chloride in a heavy-duty carpet-stain remover. The World Health Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) has determined that methylene chloride is a human carcinogen. It may also cause liver, kidney, and brain damage. Besides finding methylene chloride, LEAS also found that two germicidal VOCs are volatile organic compounds. The airborne solvents can be toxic: they can cause headaches, convulsions, central nervous system damage, dizziness, and fatigue. They can trigger asthma and cause cancer. “It seems like a no-brainer that stuff 10 the products we’re using are also used in universities and hospitals, so how bad can they be?” cleaners being used in the schools contained a liver, blood, and kidney toxin, a suspected reproductive toxin, an endocrine disruptor, and another ingredient that is toxic to the central nervous system and respiratory tract. That’s the question scientists around the world are trying to answer. In a groundbreaking study in 2002, the Washington, D.C.–based watchdog organization Environmental Working Group tested the blood and urine of nine healthy individuals and made an alarming discovery; each person was contaminated by an average of 91 chemicals, most of which didn’t exist 75 years ago. Now a growing number of scientists believes that every person in North America is carrying dozens of chemicals in the bloodstream that are foreign to the human body. But are they causing harm? The union that represents janitorial workers and other support staff is also concerned about this situation. “It was quite an eye opener,” says Brent Farbridge, a CUPE health and safety representative in Burnaby. “When you have to clean something, you want to use something strong, but we don’t want our workers—or kids at school—getting exposed to toxic stuff.” CUPE workers took their concerns to management, but making the switch to safer products wasn’t easy. “Nobody likes the union telling management what to do,” Farbridge says. “But in the end, they did the right thing. We worked with management and found some safer, greener alternatives, and that’s what we’re using today.” One of the first to raise concerns about endocrine disrupters was scientist Pete Myers. In 1996, he coauthored Our Stolen Future, a book that heavily influenced Burrows. The book links chemicals in the environment to serious health effects in animals and in people. And the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is conducting ongoing studies suggesting that low-dose exposure to toxic chemicals can cause adverse health effects ranging from asthma, cancer, chronic bronchitis, and heart and lung disease to premature death. Surprisingly, switching to safer products didn’t end up costing more. Farbridge says some of the newer alternatives were a bit more expensive, but the review led to cleaning staff following product directions more closely, so they now save money by using smaller amounts of products. But not all school districts have been so cooperative. LEAS analyzed cleaners used in Victoria schools and found products containing a carcinogen, an endocrine disruptor, and other toxic ingredients. But when Burrows asked the school board’s manager of operations, Seamus Howley, to replace the products, he said he was stuck—he’d signed a contract with a supplier for three more years. “And you know,” Howley says, “I don’t believe the product is risky when it’s diluted and used properly.” But opposition—fuelled largely by industry groups—contends that low doses of toxic chemicals are okay. For some toxic chemicals that may be true, but when it comes to carcinogens and endocrine disrupters, scientists don’t know what level of exposure might trigger cell changes that lead to cancer. They also don’t know what damage might be caused by repeated exposure. Howley says another product—a toilet cleaner with a toxic chemical—is “only used in the evenings by trained staff”. But Burrows wonders how someone is trained to use a reproductive toxin “properly”. “It’s like, ‘Let me show you how to smoke that cigarette “properly” so that you don’t ingest any of its 69 chemicals or 11 known human carcinogens.’?” So Burrows advocates what’s known as the precautionary principle. “Since we don’t know at what level toxic chemicals can cause harm, why use them at all when we have safer alternatives? My mom used to say, ‘Better safe than sorry.’?” Howley claims he’s continually reviewing what’s in use and substituting “greener” products when he’s satisfied they’re as effective. “We may not be moving as quickly as some people would like, but Not everyone agrees with Burrows or her mother. Economist Jeremy Brown of the corporate-backed 11 Burrows says. “We’re just breaking through the consciousness barrier here.” Fraser Institute says cost has to be taken into consideration. “I think it’s okay if parents at private schools want to overhaul the janitor’s closet, but if you start buying safer products for public schools, who is going to cover the price for that? Taxpayers.” Brown is not convinced that toxic chemicals in school products will necessarily affect children. “Say there’s a carcinogen in a floor cleaner. If you touch the floor and lick your finger, you’re not getting nearly enough of the chemical to be a problem.” Ultimately, Burrows would like British Columbia to follow the example of New York state, which just passed legislation that protects children, teachers, and all personnel from toxic cleaning products commonly used by schools. Until then, Barbara Docherty is a big supporter of a bill of rights for parents and students. “I’m totally in favour,” she says. “It doesn’t make you happy when you learn what kids are getting exposed to at school.” Brown admits he’s just “guessing” there wouldn’t be a problem. He believes cleaning products are “basically safe” because they’re sold for use in schools. But, in fact, companies are not required to conduct basic health and safety testing for the vast majority of the chemicals produced. According to Environmental Working Group, there are more than 85,000 chemicals in use across North America and only 10 percent have been tested for potential health and environmental effects. And it’s almost impossible to know where those chemicals will show up because, unlike in Europe, Canadian laws don’t require chemical companies to label the ingredients in cleaning products—you have to refer to the Material Safety Data Sheet (the sheet students and parents are not entitled to see). LEAS Board of Directors and Staff Mae Burrows of LEAS is an active member of CAW Local 3000. CAW National Representative Denise Kellahan is President of LEAS and CAW Local 2002 health and safety representative, Pam Taylor,is a member of the Board of Directors of LEAS. At Laura Secord elementary, Barbara Docherty spent several weeks meeting with school officials and wrote more than 30 e-mails before it was decided that the toxic paint would be replaced with a water-based latex. “I’m just lucky I had the time to fight this,” Docherty says. “Most parents don’t, so these products shouldn’t be used in the first place.” Because of input from Docherty and other concerned parents, the Vancouver school board now has a policy of using less toxic latex paint instead of oil whenever possible. WORKERS ARE DYING FOR A LIVING Alan Pickesgill Ontario workplaces continue to be very dangerous places to be in. The Workplace Safety and Insurance Board allowed claims for almost 300 work-related deaths in 2004. There were over 90,000 allowed claims for lost-time injuries. There is no indication that the numbers will drop when the dust settles on 2005. Burrows knows that her campaign to get toxic chemicals out of the school environment won’t be won overnight, which is why she says her Students’ Environmental Bill of Rights is so important and why LEAS hopes the idea catches on among schooltrustee candidates during the upcoming school-board elections. These terrible statistics came to Guelph in October, when a Linamar worker was crushed to death in a grinding machine. When William Xu went to work on the morning of Oct. 28 he likely had plans for the future, dreams for his daughter, a vision of a good life spread out before him. When he left home, his wife and daughter had every expectation that he would come home again. Instead, he fell into the “If there are chemicals in schools that have been linked to asthma, to cancer, that’s a big deal,” 12 that killed Xu until Linamar ensures it is "equipped with a guarding device and that its operating controls are located in such a manner that a worker is not endangered." Part of the tragedy surrounding industrial fatalities is that we all stand around waiting for the horse to bolt from the barn before we think to close the doors. tragic abyss of statistics that claim far too many working men and women in our province. During a month in which we remember the brave men and women who died in wartime, we should also remember the brave men and women who die at work. Their loss is no less poignant. In some ways, perhaps, it is more so. Our parents and grandparents who fell victim to the violence of the Second World War over 60 years ago were at least fighting in a noble cause. They were, for the most part, trained and equipped to deal with the battlefield hazards they would confront. In too many cases, workers are not. Workers at Linamar, just as those working for other employers, have access to most of the proven control methods that can eliminate industrial injuries and fatalities. They can get training. They can get guarding. They can have an occupational health and safety committee. They have a lot of legislation on their side. However, there is one important piece of the jigsaw puzzle they are missing: a union. Numerous studies, anecdotal evidence and direct experience have all shown that compliance with occupational health and safety legislation is much higher in unionized workplaces than it is in those without a union. Laws, regulations and standards are all well and good, but if they are not enforced they are just words. The practice of occupational health and safety is based on the Internal Responsibility System. Recent Ontario governments have cut back the number of Ministry of Labour inspectors and rely instead on voluntary compliance by employers. Sadly, this does not work. Alan Pickersgill The Ministry of Labour is investigating the incident that killed William Xu. It would not be fair to either the worker or the company to prejudge the outcome of this. There could be a judgment made about the level of training provided at Linamar, and the adequacy of lock-out systems on their machinery. A good union lifts the fine concepts that lie behind the laws and puts them into practice in the workplace. They present some compelling reasons for compliance with the law. Would William Xu still be alive today if Linamar workers were protected by a union? That's impossible to know. What we do know is that the odds would have been considerably more in his favour. But still, the fact remains that a worker died. He wasn't in some far-off land defending your freedom. He was in Guelph, making parts for your car. He should still be doing it. He should be going to work and earning his paycheque next week, next month, and next year. While we may not know yet what factors came into play to cause this particular death, we do know that all industrial fatalities are preventable. Not just some of them. All of them. This article appeared in the Guelph Mercury on November 8, 2005, just before Remembrance Day. Alan Pickersgill was a member of the CAW and has retired from the Workers Health and Safety Centre. There are recognizable hazards in every workplace. There are also proven methods that can be taken to either eliminate or control them. Machinery can be guarded, and workers can be trained to ensure that guards are in place and functioning properly before they operate the machine. It was reported on Nov. 1 that the Ministry of Labour shut down the grinder But still the fact remains that a worker died. He wasn't in some far-off land defending your freedom. He was in Guelph, making parts for your car. 13 that is all too common in political circles. ON THE ROAD TO QUITTING “The best way to deal with a pandemic is to isolate it and keep it isolated in the region in which it begins,” Mr. Bush said. Guide to becoming a non-smoker While we’ve been more and more successful in ridding our workplaces of second-hand smoke, we all know that smoking is a difficult addiction to conquer. Some say that tobacco is more addicting than heroin. Most smokers want to quit and smokers need help to overcome this habit. That’s not true. The best way to deal with a potential pandemic is to prevent it in the first place. And, because the spread of viruses is not entirely avoidable, mitigation is essential. In public health, the most successful war is the one that is averted. Here’s a very useful Health Canada site with www.Gosmokefree.ca. It provides information and includes a helpful tool, the E-Quit programme that gives smokers the opportunity to be engaged and receiving ongoing tips and advice during their attempts to quit. You can go to the above web-site and choose “quit smoking” or you can double-click on this URL: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hl-vs/tobac-tabac/quitcesser/index_e.html Averting disease is not as sexy as sending in the troops, and voiding the spread of potentially deadly bugs it not going to garner as many headlines as imposing quarantines. But it is a heck of a lot more effective. We know who is the most vulnerable to outbreaks of infectious disease: The frail and elderly, the poor, people with chronic illnesses such as asthma and heart disease, and young children whose immune systems have not yet developed. WE SHOULD BE TALKING PREVENTION Not Reacting to a Flu Pandemic George Bush says he would impose sweeping quarantines and call in the military to help enforce them during an influenza pandemic. A fat lot of good that will do. Once an outbreak or epidemic hits, it will be virtually impossible to help them. The best defence against the feared avian influenza pandemic is to improve the health of all citizens, with a particular emphasis on the most vulnerable. That means employment opportunities, income support, decent housing, breaking isolation, home care, chronic-disease management plans, vaccination and other basic health measures that are not related to a pandemic per se. The “kill bugs dead” machismo is no doubt motivated by domestic political concerns, but the U.S. President’s comments demonstrate a fundamental lack of understanding of public health We also need to build a sound public-health 14 The WHO later said the actually figure was two million to 7.4 million deaths. infrastructure so that we are ready if and when a pandemic strain of influenza does strike. Yet, in Canada, the infrastructure has been decimated by decades of indifference, a situation that was flagrantly exposed by the 2003 SARS outbreak, and that is only being slowly redressed. In Canada, the PHAC estimates that a pandemic strain of influenza could kill 11,000 to 54,000 people. It could leave as many as 138,000 in hospital, and 10.6 million Canadians so sick they would be unable to work. A pandemic obviously has the potential to be devastating, economically and otherwise. But we need to keep our wits about us. It is not at all clear whether H5N1, the current strain of influenza sweeping through poultry populations in parts of Asia, is the big one. Since 2003, millions of birds have been slaughtered as a preventive measure, and 65 people have died. But there is no clear evidence yet of human-to-human transmission that would lead to a pandemic. Canada, to its credit, has a good pandemic preparedness plan. The Public Health Agency of Canada would likely respond quickly and efficiently to the arrival of a pandemic strain of influenza. (And it would be helped by the fact that flu strains almost always originate in Asia and travel from east to west.) The PHAC has stockpiled the antiviral drug oseltamivir phosphate, better known as Tamiflu. The agency has also made provisions for emergency production of a vaccine as soon as one is available for the new strain. But drugs and vaccines are only part of the equation. How are we going to get them to people during a public-health emergency? The most logical approach is easily accessible public institutions such as schools. But schools in this country are public-health wastelands: Most no longer even have a nurse, and can barely handle nitpicky duties, let alone a pandemic strain of influenza. Another key element of dealing with a public-health emergency is good communication. The performances by Mr. Bush, and one in late September by World Health Organization official David Nabarro, demonstrate the dangers of hyperbole. “The most menacing bioterrorist is Mother Nature herself,” science journalist Madeline Drexler says. Mr. Bush talked about people being confined to their homes and guarded by armed soldiers. Dr. Nabarro speculated that the pandemic flu could kill an astonishing 150 million people. 15 through audience participation. The group was also entertained by the King George Public School grade 5 choir. The event was attended by approximately 75 interested teachers, school board executives, and interested members of the community. A pandemic strain of influenza – or something worse – will come sooner or later. But now is not the time to talk of soldiers and quarantines. Now is not the time for Chicken-Littlelike cries of the “pandemic is coming.” Politicians, policy-makers and public-health officials need to get a message out: Now is not the time to talk of how we will react, but how we will prevent. Congratulations to the Halton District School Board and the Halton Catholic District School Board on another successful event. Now, more than ever, is the time to invest in prevention, health promotion and public-health infrastructure. The healthier we are as a population, the better prepared we will be for whatever threats come our way. SAFER SUBSTITUTES The above article by André Picard appeared in the Globe and Mail on October 6, 2005. The following is information from CAW Local 444’s Sue Drouillard who is an active and committed environmentalist. Crop Waste There is an alternative to the medium density fiberboard, particle board and plywood, considered to be no. 1, 2 and 3 respectively in the highest concentrations of formaldehyde. ENVIRONMENT IN THE SCHOOLS CAW Local 707 Formaldehyde is one of the most lethal volatile organic compounds (VOC's) in the home. The World Health Organization (WHO) concluded that formaldehyde poses a greater threat than previously thought, declaring it "carcinogenic to humans". June 2004, International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC) classifies formaldehyde as a "known human carcinogen" and the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) claims it to be a "probable human carcinogen". Lil Heil, Jamie Norton, Dave Anderson, Stacey Smith On October 5, Local 707 Environment Rep Jamie Norton, Alternate Environment Rep Dave Anderson and Earth Day Presenters Lil Heil and Stacey Smith attended the second annual Environmental Education, Inspiration and Information Event sponsored by the Halton District School Board and the Halton Catholic District School Board at the Region of Halton Building. This event featured information booths from numerous government, community and private groups including the CAW Local 707 Earthday group. Keynote speaker Chris McKhool entertained the group with songs and props designed to deliver environmental messages Sue Drouillard Sweden and Japan banned the use of formaldehyde in cosmetics and Sweden banned formaldehyde in 16 from crop-waste. The high compression of the crop fibers gives structural components extra loadbearing capacity, along with insulation value and fire and water resistance. hardwood flooring. Building materials can offgass formaldehyde for 5 years or more. But, here is the GOOD NEWS I found an alternative at my local Home Depot in Windsor, Ontario. It is made of wheat straw fiber and a formaldehyde-free high performance resin. The wheat straw often comprises 100 percent of the base fiber in the new composite board mixes. They are usually lighter in weight and yet hold screws and fasteners better, resist water and is just as durable and in some cases outperforms its less green counterparts. What more could you ask for? Agriboard Industries www.agriboard.com structural integrated panels (SIPs) Dow BioProducts/Woodstalk www.dow.com/bioprod shelving, fiberboard, floor underlayment Eco-Products www.ecoproducts.com wheat sheet fiberboard Environ Biocomposites www.phenixbiocomposites.com Dakota Burl composite, wheat particlboard, Microstrand wheat panels PrimeBoard www.primeboard.com Industrial-grade wheat particleboard Wheatboard is stiffer than particleboard, resists breaking equally or better, and performs well in terms of internal bonding and its ability to hold screws and resist splitting. Not all wheatboard is made with a formaldehydefree resin, so you must look at the label. The board I found is made by Dow BioProducts' Woodstalk and is stated to be formaldehyde-free. Dow BioProducts' Woodstalk, Eco-Products' WheatSheet, Environ Biofiber, and PrimeBoard products all are VOC and formaldehyde-free, greatly improving indoor air quality at the manufacturing plant and the worksite as well as your home. MONTHLY INSPECTIONS Must be Done Have you done your monthly inspection of your workplace? By law, nearly every jurisdiction in Canada requires a monthly inspection of the entire workplace by the health and safety committee (please note, this includes Ontario). Nearly all CAW collective agreements have the same requirement. So before you replace your kitchen cabinets or make other renovations look for and tell your professional carpenter to use formaldehyde-free wheatboard materials. What is the cost? My 5/8" thick X 15-1/4" wide X 96" length maple finish, wheat shelving board cost me $12.60. Not bad I thought especially when you consider the traditional formaldehyde particleboard would have been harming my health for the next 5 years or more. One more thought. It takes an entire acre of clearcut forest - which needs thirty years or more to grow back - to provide lumber to build an 1,800-squarefoot home, according to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). By contrast, HUD estimates it takes only eighteen acres of wheat - a harvest easily replenished in a single year - to build an 1,800-square-foot house from straw based boards and panels - and the straw supplies are enormous. It is important that all CAW health and safety representatives insist on their right to inspect the workplace, take enough time to do a proper job, and Materials such as OSB, MDF and SIP's commonly used for flooring, doors, and framing can be made 17 take the time to ask the membership if they have any health or safety concerns. Mart Robinson-CAW Environment Rep. Windsor. The discussions addressed issues concerning GMCL Energy Strategies/Conservation Activities, Waste Reduction/Recycling Goals/Recycling Regulations/Autoplex Waste Audits, ISO 14001 (2004) Environmental Management Systems, Negotiated Agreements and Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR). Plant Tours showed the recycling stations, process and other environmental activities. Each Plant made presentations regarding their local Joint Workplace Environment Committee Activities, followed by an open discussion round table. What to look for? If you need a checklist, you can take a look at our CAW Health, Safety and Environment Committee Manual. You can find it on our homepage at: http://www.caw.ca/whatwedo/health&safety/hs_envi mnt_manual.asp ANNUAL JOINT CAW/GM ENVIRONMENT MEETING GM Oshawa Autoplex GM’s Oshawa Autoplex extended a warm welcome to the CAW Environment Representatives and Management Environmental Representatives from each GM location who attended the Annual Joint CAW/GM Environment Meeting as per the Collective Agreement, in the Car Assembly Chassis Training Centre November 15-16th, 2005. The meeting successfully laid the ground work for CAW Environment Reps and GM’s Environmental Officers to work together to reduce our impact on our environment. In solidarity, Dave Renaud CAW Environment Representative, Oshawa Autoplex CONFERENCE & EVENTS-2006 International RSI Awareness Day, February 28 Earth Day, April 22 Top from left: Stan Nieradka-CAW Alternate Environment Rep. Oshawa Autoplex, Perry Argentino- CAW Environment Rep. St. Catharine’s, Dave Renaud-CAW Environment Rep. Oshawa Autoplex, Doug Steele-CAW Environment Rep. Woodstock, and David MartinCAW Alternate Environment Rep. Windsor. Day of Mourning, April 28 CAW Health and Safety Conference, June 9-11, Port Elgin Bottom from left: Paul Goggan-CAW National Health, Safety & Environment GM Coordinator, Nick DeCarlo-CAW National Representative, and H:\Newsletter\2005\hse111205.doc\cw:jmcope343 18