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'He Died In Terror' - Thousands of U.S. Workers Die Each Year, Leaving Families With Questions

Lisa Hobbs holds a picture of her husband, Gene "Pius" Hobbs.
Michelle Hanks
Lisa Hobbs holds a picture of her husband, Gene "Pius" Hobbs.

What is the human impact of a failure to prioritize workplace safety? In this episode, we’ll explore how weak regulatory laws, and a failure to prioritize worker safety, may be contributing to more deaths, and a higher risk of workplace accidents -- both at the state and national levels. 

According to theOccupational Safety and Health Administration, or OSHA, website, on average, about 14 people a day in the United States are killed while working. OSHA is the government agency responsible for regulating workplace laws in the United States.OSHA doesn’t have a big budget or staff. In fact, just a little more than 2,000 OSHA workers are charged with making sure employers across the country comply with regulations. 

 

In December of 1970, nearly 50 years ago, President Richard Nixon signed the Occupational Safety and Health Act into law, and OSHA was formed soon after.

 

Five decades later, people are still being killed and injured in workplace accidents.In some states, the federal OSHA program works alongside state safety programs. 

 

Pam and Mike Oakley, at their home in Garrard County, Kentucky.
Credit J. Tyler Franklin
Pam and Mike Oakley, at their home in Garrard County, Kentucky.

Kentucky Investigation

 

That’s the case in Kentucky. A report by the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting (KyCIR) found that the state worker safety program regularly misses workplace safety violations, fails to interview witnesses and doesn’t figure out the cause of the accident. These shortcomings leave Kentucky workers at risk. An audit by the federal OSHA program backs up what Kentucky journalists found in their series of stories calledFatal Flaws.This reporting was part of a collaboration between KyCIR, the Ohio Valley ReSource, and the Center for Public Integrity.

 

In 1970,OSHA estimates indicatethere were as many as 14,000 people who died on the job in the United States that year. Since then, safety regulations have helped to significantly reduce the number of worker deaths. However,since 2015, the number of worker fatalities has actually risen, slightly. 

Unions, like the American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organizations (AFL-CIO),point to lawsthat weaken regulations. Budget cuts to OSHA and state safety programs have also affected the number of inspectors who regulate dangerous workplace violations. 

 

Since the KyCIR Fatal Flaws series first aired last fall, and following the federal OSHA audit, there have been several personnel changes in Kentucky’s worker safety program. This year, the new commissioner of the state Department of Workplace Standards, Dwayne Depp,acknowledgedthat there are failings in Kentucky’s system, but said they are improving the way they investigate and prevent worker fatalities. Families who lost loved ones in workplace accidents have been waiting for these changes for years. 

 

Nationwide Problem

 

Many workplace fatalities across the nation are preventable. So why aren’t they? When it comes to worker compensation, why are state politicians in a race to the bottom to offer lower insurance premiums to lure businesses? What is this race to the bottom costing workers?

 

Howard Berkes has been reporting on these issues for nearly forty years. He recently retired from NPR after 38 years investigating topics likeblack lung disease,mining disasters,workers compensation, and other worker safety issues here in Appalachia and across the country. Inside Appalachia producer Roxy Todd interviewed him to talk more about some of the reasons workplace fatalities continue to kill thousands of of Americans each year. 

 

 

Commentary from Jessica Lilly

 

In this episode, we hear from several families looking for answers after their loved ones died while on a job. Host Jessica Lilly said she can relate to so many of these families’ stories. Lilly’s father, Chuck Lilly, died while on a job site in 2001. He was electrocuted. “I feel in my heart that his death should  have been prevented. He should be here with us now,” Lilly said.

 

“My dad worked so hard. So much in fact that he would often fall asleep in the driveway after he got home from work. He would often tell me to get an education so I wouldn’t have to work, 'like a dog like me' as he would say. But he did it anyway. Until that day, when he didn’t come home from work. The human impact? My family has never been the same. The traditions and special moments just don’t seem to matter or even happen anymore. And I still get mad and terribly sad to see my kids grow up without him.”

 

We had help producing this episode of Inside Appalachia from the Kentucky Center for Investigative Reporting, the Ohio Valley ReSource and the Center for Public Integrity, and NPR.

Music in today’s show was provided byDinosaur Burps, Matt Jackfert, Michael Howardand Ben Townsend.

 

Roxy Toddis our producer.Eric Douglasis our associate producer. Our executive producer isJesse Wright. Liz McCormick edited our show this week. Our audio mixer is Patrick Stephens. 

You can find us online on Twitter@InAppalachia.

 

You can also send us an email to InsideAppalachia@wvpublic.org.

Visit wvpublic.org to sign up for our new Inside Appalachia newsletter. 

Copyright 2019 West Virginia Public Broadcasting

Eric is a native of Kanawha County and graduated from Marshall University with a degree in Journalism. He has written for newspapers and magazines throughout his career. After completing the certificate program with the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University, he began producing documentaries includingRussia: Coming of Age,For Cheap LobsterandWest Virginia Voices of War.
Jessica Lilly
Jessica Lilly covers southern West Virginia for West Virginia Public Radio and can be heard weekdays on West Virginia Morning, the station’s daily radio news program and during afternoon newscasts.
Roxy Todd
Roxy Todd is a reporter and co-producer for Inside Appalachia and has been a reporter for West Virginia Public Broadcasting since 2014. Her stories have aired on NPR’s Morning Edition, All Things Considered, and Marketplace. She’s won several awards, including a regional AP Award for best feature radio story, and also two regional Edward R. Murrow awards for Best Use of Sound and Best Writing for her stories about Appalachian food and culture.