Each year across America, more than 5,000 workers are killed on the  job. Another four million are injured, and thousands more will  subsequently become ill or die from present day occupational exposures.
Recent tragedies—like the explosions at the Upper Big Branch Mine in  West Virginia and aboard the Deepwater Horizon off the Gulf Coast—make  that clear.  The news coverage is certainly fostering public awareness  of the hazards facing many workers, but every day, countless other  workplace injuries and deaths go largely unnoticed.
Shortly after the Upper Big Branch explosion, the President  made clear his personal commitment and that of the Administration  to honor the victims of this disaster by ensuring justice is served on  their behalf and that an accident of this magnitude never happens  again.  He told the nation “we owe [those who perished in the UBB  disaster] more than prayers.  We owe them action.  We owe them  accountability.  We owe them an assurance that when they go to work  every day, when they enter that dark mine, they are not alone.  They  ought to know that behind them there is a company that’s doing what it  takes to protect them, and a government that is looking out for their  safety.”
To ensure that justice is done, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Mine  Safety and Health Administration (MSHA) is conducting a thorough and  comprehensive investigation into what caused that explosion.  This  investigation will be the most open and transparent in MSHA’s history.   We will be holding a number of public hearings, enabling unprecedented  public participation in the investigation. 
This investigation answers the President’s call for accountability,  but his call for action is equally important. Addressing modern  workplace hazards means equipping MSHA, as well as the Department of  Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) with modern  tools to enforce every employer’s obligation for the safety and health  of their workers.
Earlier this week, I had the opportunity to testify before the House  Committee on Education and Labor along with the Assistant Secretary for  OSHA, Dr. David Michaels and the Solicitor of Labor, Patricia Smith.  We  spoke in support of the Miner Safety and Health Act of 2010, updated  legislation based on the fundamental principles that:
- every worker is entitled to come home from work safely at the end of a shift; and
 - even in potentially dangerous industries such as mining, accidents, injuries and illnesses can be prevented when employers institute and follow safety plans, prevent hazards, and protect workers.
 
The legislation would close various loopholes, strengthen the  penalties used to enforce existing laws and better protect the rights of  workers to speak out against unsafe conditions.
For instance, under the current Occupational Safety and Health Act,  serious violations – those that pose a substantial probability of death  or serious physical harm to workers – are subject to a maximum civil  penalty of only $7,000. Willful and repeated violations carry a maximum  penalty of only $70,000. Simply put, penalties must be increased to  provide a real disincentive for employers who accept worker injuries and  deaths as a “cost of doing business.”        
In mining, companies have taken advantage of loopholes in the current  “Pattern of Violations” program and treated citations as a cost of  doing business that can be delayed for years with legal challenges while  miners are exposed to risk. 
Under the proposed changes, MSHA would look at current mine  conditions to identify patterns of recurring accidents, injuries,  illnesses or citations, or orders for safety or health violations – and  act accordingly.  MSHA would also have new remedial tools it can employ  to improve safety and health at those mines.  The same data and criteria  that MSHA uses would also be available for the public to review,  enabling mine operators to monitor their own performance and change  their ways before they put their miners into danger. 
In addition to updating necessary enforcement tools, the Miner Safety  and Health Act of 2010 would also strengthen whistleblower protections  administered by OSHA and MSHA for workers in mining and in other  industries.  It makes explicit that a worker may not be retaliated  against for reporting injuries, illnesses or unsafe conditions to  employers or to a safety and health committee, or for refusing to  perform a task that the worker reasonably believes could result in  serious injury or illness to the worker or to other employees. 
These are all important and necessary changes that would improve the  lives of working families across our nation.  After all, no job should  kill or harm our workers.  And, everyone, whether they are underground  in a mine, out in the ocean on an oil rig, or in a factory on the land,  deserves a safe and healthful workplace.
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