Common dreams has this up on the hazards of furniture workers. Be sure to click on the link to the NY Times. This relates to my post on verbal abuse–she’s not bleeding and bruised–it’s much harder, I think, for the public to see the injuries, even though she now walks with a cane. It’s amazing that she lasted five years….I wouldn’t last five minutes, being so hypersensitive now…and I am met with the same disinterest and disbelief when I talk about being hypersensitive to chemicals….you can’t show someone how these chemicals affect you until you’re so bad that you’re bedridden.
I don’t know why they can’t design furniture that doesn’t require gluing. What is wrong with just thread and needle? Is glue really required or can a more creative mind come up with a solution that doesn’t require it?
And if it is affecting the workers this way, what does it do to the person who purchases it? It’s much harder for someone to prove that their furniture is making them ill. I meet with such resistance from folks who should know better—or at least folks who should make it their business to know this stuff….but alas…
Lastly, as the article explores, what happens if the workers protest too much? The company will pack up and move overseas…or just find another worker…
From the article:
“There are people lined up out there for jobs,” said John Lyles, a vice president at Franklin, according to testimony by a plant manager in a successful lawsuit in Mississippi brought by four cushion workers who suffered severe nerve damage from the glue. “If they start dropping like flies, or something in that order, we can replace them today.”
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God, if that isn’t chilling to read. In other words, human life is so cheap, we can poison them and there will be more to take their place. Unbelievable.
Incredibly, OSHA has been inspecting this plant and filing reports of dangerous levels since 1996….and they keep repeating the same story with no results. Clearly, reading this article, OSHA does not exert its power to shut down these plants. The article states that it’s a matter of limited resources. I suspect that it is also unwilling to shut down plants because it would send so many people to the unemployment office. In this economy, the workers are even more vulnerable and need even greater protection. There are no mentions of unions in this article…so one can assume there are none?