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How could anyone reasonably defend this? The cruelty is clearly the point... Regulations like this are written in blood.
I guess we went so long with things working marginally well (in general), that everyone is convinced that the regulations that got us there are unnecessary. Things are only going to get worse until we (maybe) learn these lessons the hard way again.
the cruelty is the point
not really. The point is... that the GOP exist to make the 1% richer. These water breaks add up to a not-negligible amount of down time.
You loose more when you have to stop work because your crew is dying from heat stroke, but... details.
From the bill
Texas cities have passed burdensome local ordinances, creating a patchwork regulations across the state. These policies are better left to the employer, and if necessary, the state and federal government. Uniformity and consistent policy gives employers and employees greater clarity and flexibility.
It's a move aiming to centralize control of the state.
the purpose of this Act is to provide regulatory consistency across this state and return the historic exclusive regulatory powers to the state where those powers belong.
Oh, I know the actual reason. Just wondering how conservatives can/will try to explain their reasoning.
"Give power back to employers" is just more anti-worker bullshit.
how conservatives can/will try to explain their reasoning
get owned, libs
Yeah, Greg Abbott is a massive piece of shit. I’m hoping OSHA will have some say in this matter considering how they’ve been pushing Heat Prevention the last couple years. I’m not sure if they have power to enforce breaks from the heat through fines or not, but no employer wants to get hit by them.
See: Water, Shade, Rest
I imagine the only way OSHA would have the power to do that, is if Congress passes a federal law to supercede the Texas law. I could be wrong though, not exactly an expert on OSHA's purview.
The Occupational Safety and Health Act, which established and gave authority to OSHA, is federal law that supersedes Texas law so long as it is in force.
The law allows states to set up their own local jurisdictions if they so chose. Texas has not so chosen, so federal OSHA has authority there.
That’s a good point.
There’s also the General Duty Clause which states that it is an employers duty to provide a workplace free from recognized hazards that may cause death or serious physical injury.
Given that, I would say regardless of Abbott stripping the stricter safety requirement, employers are still legally obligated to provide water, shade, and rest to employees working in the extreme Texas summer heat.
Edit: added link
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