Farewell Letter from OSHA's Foulke

OSHA's Asst. Secretary Edwin G. Foulke Jr sent a farewell letter to the staff, dated Election Day Nov 7, recounting his goal on taking the job in March 2006:

"I just want OSHA to be the best Agency it can be"

Reading his 4-page farewell letter, he thinks he accomplished it.  He asserts:

"without a doubt, we should all be proud of the fact that American workplaces are safer and more healthful today than ever before."

Somehow I doubt that workers who developed bronchiolitis obliterans from exposure to the buttery-flavoring agent diacetyl, burned to death in the Imperial Sugar combustible dust explosion, fell to their deaths in crane collapses, or were killed by other workplace hazards would agree that Foulke should be proud.   Many hazards remain inadequately regulated because of Mr. Foulke's and Labor Secretary Chao's pro-business-at-any-cost-to-workers  attitude.

Mr. Foulke announced that he will be working at the Atlanta-based law firm Fisher & Phillips which our friends at OSHA Underground note:

"represents employers during safety and health inspections and in enforcement actions brought by OSHA, MSHA and state agencies.  ...we also defend employers from whistleblower claims investigated by OSHA, as well as under various state laws."

"...our attorneys provide advice to our non-union clients on best practices for maintaining positive employee relations without the need for a third party employee representative and the legal guidelines to follow when faced with union organizing drives."

I read with interest Mr. Foulke's reference to

"...two years of leadership meetings with OSHA's executives, the Agency's directors, regional administrators and deputies focused on our mission and developed our values and vision."

Do share!  Where can we read these "values and vision"?

"...our leadership meetings at Hunt Valley and Lake Mary with all of OSHA's management leaders allowed us to discuss and plot OSHA's path into the future, a productive dialogue that took place for the first time in the Agency's history."

Hunt Valley and Lake Mary must mean something to insiders, but as far as I know, OSHA doesn't have any offices in such places.  I, for one, would be really interested in learning more about ideas for "plotting OSHA's path into the future."  I wonder if that plot included OSHA protection for the 8.6 million state and local employees who are not covered by OSHA, or the tens of thousands of migrant workers who have no real safety rights on the job.

If you are a glutton for punishment, or just need a good gag, Foulke's farewell letter is here.

Effective today, Nov 10, the acting asst. secretary of OSHA is Thomas M. Stohler, who has been a deputy A/S at OSHA since May 2008.

More like this

A classic tool used in public relations is a news release. Companies and other organizations craft these statements to announce new products, activities or accomplishments. Well-written news releases offer the what, where, when, who and why, and are often used "as-is" in trade publications and…
[Updated (10/30/07) below] Representatives from the National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) and the Chamber of Commerce met this week with White House Office of Management and Budget in a last-ditch effort to influence OSHAâs rule clarifying employersâ obligation to pay for workers' personal…
Mr. Eleazar Torres-Gomez, 46, was killed at an Oklahoma Cintas laundry plant on March 6, 2007, when he was dragged into an industrial dryer because of an unguarded conveyor.  Federal OSHA investigated the fatality and, this week, proposed a $2.78 million penalty for, among other things, 42…
While the House of Representatives was voting Wednesday to approve the Popcorn Workers Lung Disease Prevention Act (here), OSHA's Assistant Secretary Edwin Foulke had just mailed a letter rejecting a petition from a group of workersâ who'd asked for emergency protection from the respiratory…

First duty of the new one: Press release a reality check.

And I hope that OSHA and MSHA both go back to the days when they have their own small press offices and congressional affairs offices.

By Celeste Monforton (not verified) on 10 Nov 2008 #permalink