For Immediate Release
December 3, 2007
Bill Glanz
(202) 824-1566
or
cell: (202) 329-5856
City of Charleston is Still Guilty
OSHA Settlement is a Travesty
Washington, DC – Following is a statement from
International Association of Fire Fighters General President Harold Schaitberger
on a settlement the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and
Regulation, Office of Occupational Safety and Health reached with the city of
Charleston:
“This settlement is a travesty. It’s an insult to the memory of
the nine fire fighters who died in the Sofa Super Store fire, to their families
and to the fire fighters who remain on the job,” President Schaitberger said.
“Despite the formal, written request of the fire fighters union
to South Carolina OHSA, and the mayor’s promise during the October release of
the fire safety consultant report to involve employees (and their
representatives) in addressing the department’s problems, not one of our members
was asked to participate in this settlement process and it remains a complete
mystery as to how OSHA arrived at this settlement, especially as it relates to
items that they incorrectly assume are being fixed. It certainly did not do so
based upon interviews with those who are most likely to be affected by its
actions – the Charleston fire fighters,” he said.
“Changing a single word – from ‘willful’ to ‘unclassified’ –
doesn’t change the fact that the city is guilty and was found guilty by South
Carolina OSHA of acting in a manner that the department leadership knew could
kill fire fighters,” he said.
“Why has the city spent two months negotiating with OSHA over
the wording in its citation when it could have spent that time to improve a
deficient fire department and protect the lives of fire fighters and the
citizens of Charleston?” President Schaitberger asked.
“It has been made clear by the facts uncovered by a number of
separate investigations, including the panel set up by the mayor, that the
irresponsible manner in which Chief Rusty Thomas runs the Charleston Fire
Department likely played a deadly role in the tragic deaths of the fire
fighters. South Carolina OSHA is not acting in the best interests of workers in
the state. And the result is already being felt by fire fighters in Charleston
because this chief is already refusing to implement new procedures promised by
the mayor and is telling fire fighters to get used to the way it was before the
fire because that’s the way it’s going to be,” President Schaitberger said.
The International Association of Fire Fighters, headquartered
in Washington, DC, represents more than 287,000 full-time professional fire
fighters and paramedics who protect 80 percent of the nation’s population. More
information is available at www.iaff.org.
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