WASHINGTON, D.C. -- Union members -- including firefighters,
postal workers, nurses, city workers, janitors, teachers, factory
workers, telephone operators and others -- will join with members of
their communities for Workers Memorial Day to give remembrance to
the workers killed on September 11, as well as to those killed and
injured on the job last year.
The event is part of Workers
Memorial Day, a worldwide annual event which has taken on a new
meaning in the wake of the September 11 events. Hundreds of events
will take place across the nation and globe and many will feature
yellow and black ribbons -- black signifies mourning and yellow
signifies hope and the fight for the living. Workers Memorial Day is
on April 28, though events occur all weekend.
In New York
City, thousands of local union members will join national and New
York City labor and community leaders on Friday, April 26 --
including AFL-CIO President John Sweeney -- to remember the workers
killed on September 11. Under the banner of “Mourn for the Dead and
Fight for the Living,” hundreds will hold a Workers Memorial Day
church service and will then have a bagpipe-led procession to the
World Trade Center site. They will gather to recognize that though
nothing could have saved the workers killed on September 11, one of
the best ways to honor them is to work for safer workplaces and to
help workers improve their lives through unions.
The union
members are calling for all workers in Lower Manhattan to observe a
minute of silence at noon on Friday, April 26 to honor the workers
who died on September 11 and on the job last year. They will pass
out 100,000 leaflets and stickers at subway stops to ask people to
observe the minute of silence.
Workers Memorial Day is
traditionally a time to commemorate the victims of workplace
injuries, diseases and fatal catastrophes. The AFL-CIO will release
a study entitled “Death on the Job: The Toll of Neglect; a
State-by-State Profile of Worker Safety and Health in the United
States,” which shows that overall workplace injuries and fatalities
declined slightly, but are on the rise for certain groups of workers
including Hispanic workers. The study also shows that protections
across the states vary widely. Alaska, Wyoming and Montana had the
highest fatality rates in 2000 while Rhode Island, Massachusetts,
and New Hampshire had the lowest. It would take federal OSHA 84
years to inspect all the workplaces under its jurisdiction just
once.
While more than 1.8 million workers each year suffer
ergonomics injuries such as repetitive motion injuries and back
injuries, the Bush Administration struck down the ergonomics
standard which had been 10 years in the making and has announced
that it will rely on voluntary measures to address this problem. The
Bureau of Labor Statistics recently released new data showing that
in 21 of 43 states reporting, ergonomic injuries went up between
1999 and 2000. The most dramatic increases are: 40 percent more
workers who had to take off work because of an injury in Maine, 32
percent in Nevada, 17 percent in California, and 10 percent in
Massachusetts.